LAW 277 2 Contract Law 1
LAW 277 2 Contract Law 1
LAW 277 2 Contract Law 1
1
CONTRACT LAW
What is “Contract?”
Parties to Contract
Elements of Contract
Offer
Acceptance
Consideration
Intention to Create Legal Relation
Legal Capacity
Certainty
2
WHAT IS ‘CONTRACT’?
The Oxford Concise Dictionary defines
contract as “a written or spoken agreement
between two or more parties, intended to be
enforceable by law”
S.2(h) of the Contracts Act 1950 provides
that : “Contract is an agreement
enforceable by law”
3
What Is ‘Contract’ctd…
Not all agreements are
Based on contracts although all
S. 2(h) contracts are
agreements.
CONTRACT
5
PARTIES TO A CONTRACT
Offeror
Has the power
either to
accept or to
reject the offer
Makes an offer
to the offerree
Offeree
6
Eg: Johan offer to sell his iPhone 4s to Sherry at the price of RM 1000
with the hope that Sherry will accept it.
Person who made the offer/proposal is known as
promisor/proposer/offeror : __________
The person who accepted the proposal is known as
Promisee/acceptor :___________
Every section must be referred to Contract Act 1950. As for the cases, you should
be able to identify the parties involved in the case.
EG: CARLILL V CARBOLIC SMOKE BALL CO.
PLAINTIFF: party who sues (_____________)
DEFENDANT: party who being sued (____________)
PLAINTIFF
v DEFENDANT
7
ELEMENTS OF A VALID
CONTRACT
(a) Offer
(b) Acceptance
(c) Consideration
(d) Intention to create legal relation
(e) Certainty
(f) Capacity
8
OFFER/PROPOSAL
“When one person signifies to another his
willingness to do or to abstain from doing
anything, with a view to obtaining the assent of
that other to the act or abstinence, he is said to
make a proposal.” [S. 2(a) of the Contracts Act ]
10
OFFER ctd…
Requirement for Valid Offer :-
• Offer must be clear and certain
• S. 30 – offer which is not clear and certain is
1. void
11
OFFER ctd…
Offer/Proposal can be made either to:
(a) a particular person (Bilateral Offer ):
Made to a specific person or group of persons.
Eg- Chan offer to sell his car, a Toyota Vios, to Teong for
RM40,000
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OFFER ctd…
A proposal is said to have been communicated
only if the party who accepts it knew about the
proposal. If a party accepting a proposal is not
aware about the proposal, then there is no
contract.
If Harry found Sam’s lost Garfied and returns it to
him, unaware of the fact that Sam had advertised
in the newspaper that reward will be given to
those who found his cat.
In this situation, Harry cannot claim
for the reward because there is no
contract between Sam and Harry.
13
OFFER ctd…
CASE
CARLILL v CARBOLIC SMOKE BALL CO.
[1983] 1 QB 525
The defendant company advertised in the newspaper
that they would offer £100 to anyone who took medicine
as prescribed by the defendant for a fixed period and
still succumbed to influenza after finishing the
prescribed doses. The plaintiff used the medicine for a
fixed period as prescribed, but still contracted
influenza. The plaintiff then sued the defendant for the
money.
Court : the plaintiff was entitled to the £100 as
R v CLARKE
15
OFFER ctd…
COUNTER
PROPOSAL/ What is
OFFER is not an COUNTER
ACCEPTANCE OFFER?
16
COUNTER OFFER/PROPOSAL
Counter Offer is a situation whereby after a
proposal has been made, suddenly either one of
the party make a new proposal or change a vital
terms of the contract. Eg- change of price.
Any changes made on the original proposal is
known as counter offer/ proposal.
It is treated as REJECTION of the
original proposal.
17
Counter Offer…ctd
Effect:-
o Original offer/proposal is
destroyed and it can no longer be
accepted
o The party making the counter
offer/proposal is known as
proposer and the other party (if
he accepts the counter
offer/proposal) becomes the
acceptor.
18
Counter Offer…ctd
HYDE v WRENCH
It is very important to
differentiate an OFFER
from a mere
INVITATION
TO TREAT
What is
INVITATION
TO TREAT?
20
INVITATION TO TREAT
Invitation to treat is not an offer. It is just an
invitation to make an offer/to invite someone to
make an offer.
Person making an ITT does not intend to be
bound by a person to whom the statement is
addressed to and as soon as it is accepted.
It is a sort of preliminary negotiation to buy
something.
21
Invitation To Treat…ctd
Examples of ITT:
Goods displayed in the shop with price tag.
Advertisement in the newspaper.
Auction sale.
Tenders
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Display Of Goods
CASE
FISHER v BELL
Fact: The defendant displayed flick knives in
his shop windows. He was then convicted of a
criminal offence of offering such knives for
sale.
Held: Display of any goods with a price tag on
it in a shop window was not an offer but rather
it was an invitation to treat.
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Display Of Goods ctd…
Display of goods
Customer put in
the basket
IT IS NOT
AN OFFER
25
Advertisements in the
Newspaper
Referring to Oxford
Advanced Learner’s
Dictionary,
advertisement here
means a notice, picture
or film telling people
about a product, job or
service.
26
Advertisements ctd…
CASE
28
Auction Sale
A call for bids by the auctioneer is merely an
invitation to threat. When someone places his
bid he is regarded as making an offer and the
auctioneer is free to accept or reject the bid.
A sale by public auction is complete when the
auctioneer announces its completion by the
fall of the hammer.
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Auction Sale ctd…
OFFER;
places a bid
INVITATION
TO TREAT
ACCEPTANCE;
COMPLETION; accepts the bid
Fell of hammer
AGREEMENT AN OFFER
30
Auction Sale ctd…
CASE
PAYNE v CAVE HARRIS V NIKERSON
Auction sale include office
Held: Court furniture. During auction, there
held that the were no furniture. P sued D for
auctioneer’s breach of contract
request for bids Held : auction sale is ITT.
is an invitation proposal only exist when the
to treat and customer bids. Contract only
each bid is an exist when the auctioneer
offer. accepts the price bids by the
customer.
31
Tenders
When tenders are invited from the public for
the highest price for the tendered items/
services or lowest price to supply the required
items/ services it is regarded as mere
invitation to treat.
In Spencer v Harding, the Court held that
tenders are mere invitation to treat like
auction sale.
32
ACCEPTANCE
33
ACCEPTANCE ctd…
34
Requirement for Valid Acceptance
35
Acceptance Must Be Absolute and
Unqualified
36
Acceptance Must Be Absolute and
Unqualified – ctd…
According to Oxford Advanced Learner’s
Dictionary, absolute means definite and
without any doubt or confusion, while
unqualified means having the right
knowledge.
37
Acceptance Must Be Absolute and
Unqualified - ctd…
CASE
HYDE v WRENCH
Facts: The defendant on 6 June offered to sell his
farm to the plaintiff for £1000 and on 8 June the
plaintiff replied that he was willing to buy the
farm for £950. The defendant refused to sell the
farm for £950. Then on 29 June the plaintiff was
willing to buy the farm for £1000.
Held: No contract was made between them
because the plaintiff made a counter-offer.
38
Communication of Acceptance
“The communication of acceptance is
complete
(a)as against the proposer, when it is put in a
course of transmission to him, so as to be out
of the power of the acceptor; and
(b)as against the acceptor, when it comes to
the knowledge of the proposer.”
[Section 4(2), Contracts Act 1950]
39
Communication of Acceptance
ctd…
In cases of telephone
communication, the
acceptance is deemed to
have been completed at the
time and place it is heard by
the offeror
In cases of acceptance
through post, the
acceptance is complete
upon posting and not
upon receiving.
40
Instantaneous Communication
• For an acceptance communicated through telephone,
answering machine, fax, email and sms, section 4(2)(b)
applies, whereby acceptance is complete as against the
proposer when the acceptance comes to the knowledge of
the proposer.
• Hence, if the acceptor is using the method of accepting as
above, the acceptance is complete only if the proposer is
aware of such situation.
• If the acceptor is using the telephone, he must make sure
that he talks to the proposer. If he is using answering
machine, proposer has to listen to the massage. If he is
using fax, email or sms, the proposer must have read the
massage.
41
Acceptance Through Post
Proposer is bound when the acceptor posts the
letter even though the proposer has no knowledge
of the acceptance or even the letter is delayed or
disappeared in the course of transit. This is
because that once the letter posted, the acceptor
has no longer control over the letter.
This rule is known as postal rule. Under common
law, the rule is that acceptance is complete once
the letter is put in the letter box. It is place where
the contract is made.
42
Acceptance Through Post
Ignatius v Bell
Communication by post is the method
agreed by the parties. Acceptance had been
made by post. However there was a delay in
the course of transmission.
Court : acceptance was complete. Contract
exist between the parties.
43
Silent is Not Acceptance
Silence does not constitute an acceptance.
Reason – S. 3 - acceptance must be
communicated to the offeror.
S. 2(b) - acceptance requires a positive act of
acceptance.
Sec 7(b) - “….. the acceptance must be expressed
in some usual and reasonable manner, unless the
proposal prescribes the manner in which it is to
be accepted.
If there is a “mode of acceptance prescribed by
the offeror” it must be followed by the offeree in
order to make a valid acceptance.
44
Silence is not Acceptance…ctd
FELTHOUSE v BINDLEY
He wrote a letter to John
Felthouse wanted to buy and said“ If I hear no more
his nephew’s horse about it, I consider the horse
is mine”
Felthouse sued
John did not reply but
Bindley claiming
told Bindley (the
that there was a
auctioneer) not to sell
contract btwn
the horse (as John
him & his nephew
intend to reserve the
By accident, horse for his uncle)
Bindley did sell
the horse
45
Silent is Not Acceptance
46
Exception to Communication of Acceptance
48
Exception to Communication of Acceptance
2. General offer
The offer is made to the public at large
Performance of the condition of the offer is
sufficient to constituted an acceptance
Case : Carlill vs Carbolic Smoke Ball Co
49
Exception to Communication of Acceptance
50
Exception to Communication of Acceptance
51
Revocation of Offer and
Acceptance
“A proposal may be revoked at any time before
the communication of its acceptance is
complete as against the proposer, but not
afterwards.”
“An acceptance may be revoked at any time
before the communication of the acceptance
is complete as against the acceptor, but not
afterwards.”
[Section 5, Contracts Act 1950]
52
Revocation…ctd
S.6 (c ) failure of
the acceptor to S. 6(d) death
fulfill a condition or mental
precedent to the
acceptance disorder
S. 6(a) notice of
revocation by
the proposer to
the other party
53
Communication of Revocation
“The communication of a revocation is
complete
(a) as against the person who makes it, when it is
put in a course of transmission to person to
whom it is made, so as to be out of the power
of the person who makes it; and
(b)as against the person to whom it is made,
when it comes to his knowledge.”
[Section 4(3), Contracts Act 1950]
54
Revocation ctd…
CASE
BYRNE v VAN TIENHOVEN
Fact: On 1 October, the defendant offered by
letter goods for sale to the Plaintiff. On 11 October
the plaintiff received the letter and accepted by
telegraph immediately. On 8 October, the
defendant wrote to the plaintiff revoking the offer
and the revocation letter was received by the
plaintiff on 20 October.
Held: There has been a binding contract on 11
October and revocation was not effective.
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Revocation ctd…
1st October
8th October
The Def offered goods
The Def revoked the offer
to the plaintiff
11th October
The plaintiff received the 20th October
letter and accepted The plaintiff received
by telegraph the revocation letter
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INTENTION TO CREATE LEGAL
RELATIONS
Mere existence of an agreement does not in itself
create a binding legal contract.
The parties in the contract should have intention
to create legal relations. If there is no intention to
create legal relation between the parties, no valid
and binding contract could be made.
The court may ascertain the intention of the
parties to create legal relation from the language
and context of the agreement and conduct of the
parties.
57
Intention to Create Legal Relations ctd…
2 presumptions used by court to determine intention:-
1) In family/domestic arrangements/agreements
BALFOUR v BALFOUR
The defendant promised to give his wife, the
plaintiff £30 per month as maintenance.
Held: The Court of Appeal held that this
promise was not enforceable because the
parties did not intend to create legal relation.
59
Intention to Create Legal Relations ctd…
CASE
MERRIT v MERRIT
There was a document signed by the husband
that in consideration of the wife paying all
charges in connection with the matrimonial
home until the mortgage repayments had been
completed, the husband would agree to transfer
the property to her sole ownership.
The Court held that the agreement was
enforceable since the parties intended the
agreement to be legally binding.
60
Intention to Create Legal Relations ctd…
61
Intention to Create Legal Relations ctd…
62
CONSIDERATION
“When, at the desire of the promisor, the promisee or
any other person has done or abstained from doing,
or does or abstain from doing, or promises to do or to
abstain from doing something, such act or abstinence
or promise called a consideration for the promise.”
[Section 2(d) of Contracts Act 1950]
63
Consideration ctd…
Consideration can be considered as bargain, the price
which one party pays to buy the promise or act of the
other
Consideration must be moved from both sides. From the
promisor to the promisee and from the promisee to the
promisor.
64
Consideration ctd…
OR
65
Consideration ctd…
TYPES OF
CONSIDERATION
66
Executory Consideration
Executory Consideration: It is a consideration where
the parties exchange promises to perform acts in the
future. ie- a promise in return of a promise
Eg- Ali promise Hasan to assist him to prepare the
drawing for the new housing project. Hasan agree to pay
RM1,000 in return for Ali’s assistance.
67
Executed Consideration
68
Past Consideration
It is where one party has voluntarily
performed an act and the other party later
promises to reward for the voluntary act.
In past consideration the voluntary act is done
first and the promise is made later. This
voluntary act is called past consideration.
69
Past Consideration ctd…
70
Past Consideration ctd…
71
Past Consideration ctd…
It should be noted that past consideration is
not recognised in the UK.
In Roscorla v Thompson,
the court decided that the
promise made by the defendant
was unenforceable since the
consideration provided by the
plaintiff was already past when
the promise was made.
72
Past Consideration ctd…
CASE
HOW ABOUT
“WITHOUT
CONSIDERATION”?
IS THE CONTRACT
VALID IF THERE IS NO
CONSIDERATION?
74
Without Consideration
“An agreement without consideration is void..”
[S. 26,Contract Act 1950]
Exception:-
a) Agreement made based on natural love and affection
(S. 26(a))
b) Agreement to pay compensation for a past voluntary
act (S.26(b) – limb 1) and an agreement to pay
compensation to a person who did an act which the
promisor was legally compellable to do (S.26(b) limb
2)
c) Agreement to pay a statute barred debt (S.26(c))
75
S. 26(a)-Natural Love & Affection
Contracts Act 1950 in Malaysia recognizes natural love and
affection as valid consideration if the requirements stated
in Section 26(a) are satisfied.
S. 26(a) an agreement without consideration based on love
and affection is valid if :-
it is expressed in writing;
registered (if required under the law);
is made on account of natural love and affection between
parties **standing in a near relation to each other.
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S.26(b)-Past Voluntary Act
a) Agreement to pay compensation for a past voluntary act
(S.26(b) limb 1)
b) Agreement to pay compensation to a person who did an
act which the promisor was legally compellable to do
(S.26(b) limb 2)
81
Rules of Consideration
a) Adequacy of Consideration
b) Part payment may discharge an obligation
c) Consideration may come from a third
party
82
Adequacy of Consideration
“An agreement is not void merely because the
consideration is inadequate.”
[Explanation 2 of section 26]
83
Adequacy of Consideration ctd…
CASE
84
Part payment may discharge an obligation
General rule under English Law – payment of a smaller
sum is not a satisfaction of an obligation to pay a larger
sum.
Sec.64 CA provides if a party pays a small sum in full
satisfaction of a larger sum, it will discharge the larger
sum regardless of who makes the payment of the
smaller sum, it will discharge the larger sum.
Illustrations (b)
“A owes B RM5,000. A pays to B, and B accepts, in
satisfaction of the whole debt, RM2,000 paid at the time
and place at which the RM5,000 were payable. The
whole debt is discharged.”
85
Part payment may discharge obligation ctd...
CASE
87
Purpose and Consideration should be
Legal and Enforceable by Law
The purpose or consideration of the contract
should be legal. If the purpose of the contract
is illegal, then the contract would be invalid
and would not be enforceable by law.
Example: Selling of dangerous drugs, narcotic
drugs, heroine etc.
88
CERTAINTY
“Agreements, the meaning of which is not
certain, or capable of being made certain, are
void.”
[Section 30, Contracts Act]
89
CERTAINTY ctd…
CASE
90
CAPACITY TO MAKE A
CONTRACT
S. 10(1) of Contracts Act – “all agreements are
contract if they are made with free consent of
parties competent to contract …”
92
Capacity (Age of Majority) ctd…
Section 2 - Age of Majority Act 1971, the age
of majority is 18 years and above. The
person is called a major .
Those who is below 18 years old is a minor.
The General rule: contracts made by
minors are void
Reason for this is to prevent the minors against
any consequences of its own action.
93
Capacity (Age of Majority) ctd…
CASE
95
Contracts relating to marriage etc
Under Age of Majority Act 1971 - the capacity of any
person to act in the matters involving marriage, divorce,
dower and adoption is not affected by the provision of Age
of Majority Act 1971.
96
Contract for Necessaries
“Necessaries” are things which are essential to
the existence and reasonable comfort of the
infant, e.g. food, books and clothes.
Therefore, luxurious articles such as gold
chains are excluded from necessaries.
97
Contracts for Necessaries ctd…
Based on S.69 – contract with a minor is a valid
contract provided that :
i. The necessities must have been supplied to a
minor.
ii. The minor’s liability includes necessities supplied
to anyone whom he is legally bound to support
such as wife or child.
iii. The supplier of necessities may claim only a
reasonable price which may not be the same as the
contract price.
iv. Minor may only pay if he has the property to do so.
98
Contracts for Necessaries ctd…
CASE
CASE
Nash v. Inman
Fact: Defendant ordered clothes from Plaintiff
including 11 fancy coats. Evidence given by the
Defendant’s father showed that the Defendant
already had adequate supply of clothes suitable
and necessary for his condition in life.
Held : the clothes ordered were not necessary.
Therefore, plaintiff’s action failed.
100
Contract for Scholarship
101
Contract for Insurance
102
Contract of service or apprenticeship
Children and Young Persons (Employment)
Act 1966 enable a minor to enter into a contract
of service @ apprenticeship @ internship –
allowing them to do light work, involve in public
entertainment other than as an employer.