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Summary Unit 1 - Offer and Acceptance

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In-depth notes on Offer and Acceptance, a key topic in Contract Law, collated from lectures, tutorials and textbooks.

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February 24, 2024
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Contract Law – Prepare 1 12.10.21


Unit 1 – Offer and Acceptance

Tutorial 1: Formation of Contracts

1 – Introduction

 Contracts occur in day-to-day life – such as buying a train ticket, a newspaper & cinema
tickets
o Also occur with jobs, insurance, mortgages/rent
 Contracts are essentially just about “agreements” or “deals” (and “bargains”) – this is
whether the transaction is small or huge
 Contract lawyers advise on all sorts of dealings, and may be involved in drafting contracts
where they ensure they achieve what their clients want
o May be involved in litigation (suing and defending claims in contract)
 Formation of a contract – requirements for there to be a contract, how a contract gets made
 Remedies for breach of contract – what happens if someone breaks a contract, what the
remedies for breach of contract are
 Exemption clauses – clauses designed to get someone off the hook in some shape or form,
found in small print?
 3 key elements to formation of a contract:
o Agreement – made up of offer and acceptance
o Intention to create legal relations
o Consideration
 If these 3 elements are present, then we have a contract

2 – What is an Offer?

 English law has a sort of idealised conception of contract formation – sees contracts as
formed by one person putting forward a proposal, and the other person agreeing to it
 Offer and acceptance provides the analytical mechanism which the law uses to identify
contract formation
o Offeror = person who makes the proposal
o Offeree = person who received the proposal
 A proposal isn’t an offer unless the seller knows exactly what they’re selling, at what price,
and are committed/prepared to sell – the price must be specific and clear
 Requirements for an offer are:
o “Willingness to be bound” by the proposal if it’s agreed to
o “Certainty of terms” = sufficient certainty in the terms of the proposal
 Willingness to be bound = putting oneself in a position where you may be bound to a
contract has got to be voluntary – therefore law has this requirement
 Certainty of terms = prevention of vague conditions (too vague may well mean the
agreement was too uncertain to enforce) – undermined by incompleteness & uncertainty

3 – Acceptance

 Terms of offer must be accepted as it’s the offer that’s being agreed to

1

, Contract Law – Prepare 1 12.10.21


 Acceptance = the unqualified assent to the terms of the offer
o Assent (express agreement) to contracts is voluntary, so offeree must be doing
something of their own volition in entering into the contract
o ‘Unqualified’ as this ensures complete assent to terms of the offer (i.e. offeree can’t
agree to some bits and not others)
 Law takes the view that you need to have let the offeror know that you agree to the terms
of their offer – otherwise they wouldn’t know whether they’re bound by a contract or not
o Law requires the acceptance to be communicated to the offeror
 Issue of communication when both parties aren’t in close proximity is tough – do we treat
contents of a letter as communicated when its posted/arrived/read/replied to?
o Requirement for communication of acceptance is only a general rule

4 – Termination of Offer

 This is ways in which an offer can cease to be “on the table”
 3 main ways an offer can disappear
 Revocation = where the offeror takes the offer off the table
o Successful revocation (withdrawal) requires the revocation of the offer to be
communicated to the offeree – it’s still open for acceptance until the offeree is told
otherwise
 Rejection = where the offeree sweeps the offer off the table
o Express rejection of offer brings it to an end – you can’t later change your mind and
accept
o Counteroffers impliedly rejects a previous offer (settled law), but often hard to tell if
a response to an offer is actually a counteroffer, or just a request for more info about
the offer
 “Would you take £X instead?” = seen as a proposal of its own (counter)
 “Would you be prepared to come down a bit on that?” = exploratory enquiry
 Lapse = where the offer disappears from the table by itself

6 – Agreements

 Some agreements are meant to be legally binding (buying a car from dealership), whereas
others aren’t (agreement with girlfriend about chores)
 Commercial agreements = agreements between individuals (could be between individuals
not in business) and businesses – e.g. buying something in a shop
o Presumption of intention to create legal relations
 Domestic agreements = agreements where there is some other relationship between the
parties (e.g. family members or close friends)
o Presumption of no intention to create legal relations
 Both these presumptions are rebuttable – whether there is (not) intention to create legal
relations is based on a case-by-case basis
 There have been few cases involving commercial agreements where the presumption of
intention to create legal relations has been successfully rebutted
 A clear statement that the agreement isn’t meant to be legally binding would work



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