Notes On The Law of Contract by Datius D
Notes On The Law of Contract by Datius D
Notes On The Law of Contract by Datius D
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MEANING OF A CONTRACT
A contract is an agreement enforceable by law or an agreement that is legally enforceable.
“…a promise or set of promises for the breach of which the law gives a remedy, or the
performance of which the law in some way or an agreement between two or more persons which
is intended by them to have legal consequences.
An agreement is further defined by section 2(1) (e) of LCA to mean every promise or set of
promises, forming the consideration for each other.
An agreement not enforceable by law s said to be void (s.2(1)(g)
An agreement is made of an offer and acceptance.
A contract must be an agreement and to qualify as a contract an agreement must meet of tests.
The main test is whether or not the agreement is enforceable by law.
Essential ingredient of a contract
By section 10 of the Law of Contract Act, 1961, all agreements are contracts if they are made by
the free consent of parties competent to contract, for a lawful consideration and with a lawful
object, and are not hereby expressly declared to be void.
To summarise the essentials are:
(i) Free consent
(ii) Competency or capacity to contract
(iii) Lawful consideration or object
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However, the law does not say whether an intention to create legal relation is also an essential
element of a contract. Once a contract has fulfilled the above conditions, then it becomes
sacrosanct, meaning neither the court no any other person may interfere with it.
Formation of an agreement
Meaning of an offer
s.2 (1)(a) when one person signifies to another his willingness to do or to abstain from doing
anything, with a view to obtain the assent of that other to such act or abstinence, he is said to
make a proposal.
A proposal is made up of a term or terms.
Offer
• Offer – a definite proposal or final statement by one party of the terms in which s/he will enter
into a contract
• Can be made in writing, orally or by conduct
• Can be made to a specific person(s) or to the whole world
• Leads to a contract if matched by „acceptance‟ by the other party
Characteristics of a proposal
(a) The proposal must have been made willingly
(b) The terms must be clear and certain
(c) Firm and final expression of his willingness to be bound
s. 29, an agreement the meaning of which is not certain or capable of being made certain are
void.
Case law
Nittin Coffee Estates Ltd and another v. United Engineering Works Ltd and another
The parties concluded agreements of sale although the price was not stated. The court of appeal
of Tanzania stated that since price is fundamental term in a sale agreement, if it is not mentioned
the agreement becomes uncertain.
Proposals and Invitations to treat
• Distinguished from „invitation to treat‟ or preliminary negotiations/enquiries
• „Invitation to treat‟ = general expression of willingness to enter into a contract i.e. not definitive
• Generally, advertisements are „invitations to treat‟
• Unlike a offer which is final, firm and clear expression of willingness by the offeror to be
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bound an invitation to treat does not express final willingness to be bound in those terms. The
invitor merely proposes certain terms on which he is willing to negotiate. He invites any person
to make an offer in the terms he has proposed. He may accept or reject the offer.
• Partridge v Crittenden [1968] 1 WLR1204
• Applt placed ff advert in a periodical
• “Bramblefinch cocks, Bramblefinch hens 25s each”
• Charged with unlawfully offering for sale a wild bird
• Held (QB): the advert was only an invitation to treat; it was not an offer for sale; thus, applt
could not be guilty of the offence
• Adverts are generally invitations to treat and not offers
Some advertisements can qualify as invitation to treat and not offers (see Patridge v. Crittenden
above and below)
• Harris v Nickerson [1873] LR 8 QB 286
• Auctioneer advertised auction to be held at Bury St. Edmunds including some office furniture
• Clmt travelled up from London
• The office furniture were withdrawn from the sale
• Clmt sued for loss of time and for expenses
• Held (QB): clmt had no right of action; the advert was an invitation to treat and not a promise
that all the items would be put up for sale
• Each bid is an offer
• “A sale by auction is complete when the auctioneer announces its completion by the fall of the
hammer, or in other customary manner; and until the announcement is made any bidder may
retract his bid.” S. 57(2) Sale of Goods Act 1979
Request for Information
A person may request for supply of information. What is the legal effect of supplying
information? The case of Harvey v. Facey is relevant.
The appellant sent a telegram to the respondent asking ; “ will you sell us bumper hall pen?
Telegraph lowest cash price, reply paid”. The respondent simply replied “ lowest price of
bumper hall pen £900”. The appellants then purported to accept the offer.
Held
The privy council held that, no offer had been made which the appellants could accept because
the respondents did not reply to the first part of the question “ will you sell us bumper hall pen?”
rather the second part of the question.
Contracts by tender
In contracts by tender are made by those tendering. Now suppose the person inviting tenders puts
conditions to be fulfilled before a tender is considered. Suppose further that the tenderer fulfils
those conditions, and any liability arise out of such a tender.
The law is to the effect that where a person is invited to tender under certain conditions and he
complies then he acquires the title to have his tender considered along with other tenders.
However, take note that the LCA is silent on the issue of invitation to treat. However, if one
reads s. 2(10(d) carefully statement which are not clear and certain, firm and final expression of
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COMMUNICATION OF A PROPOSAL
An offer or proposal may be made either expressly or impliedly. Since a proposal must be
communicated to the person to whom it is intended. The communication of a proposal is deemed
to be made by an act or omission of the party proposing and which has the effect of
communicating it.
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An offer is effective when, and not until, it is communicated to the offeree. An acceptance in
ignorance of an offer is not an acceptance.
A proposal may be made to a definite person, to some class of persons or to the whole world. In
Carlil v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co, the court made it clear that, it is possible to make an offer to
the whole world and that the contract is then made with anyone who accepts the offer but not
with all the world.
An offer must be communicated, and communication of an offer becomes effective when it is
complete i.e. when it comes to the knowledge of the person to whom it was made. S.4 (1) LCA.
TERMINATION OF AN OFFER
An offer or proposal may be terminated at any time before its acceptance is complete. Once an
offer has been accepted a binding contract is formed.
• An offer may be terminated in 5 principal ways
– Withdrawal/ revocation
– Rejection
– Lapse of Time for want of acceptance
– Upon Occurrence of a Specific Event or failure of a condition precedent
– Death of the Offeror or insanity
• Termination by Withdrawal/ Revocation
A proposal may be revoked at any time before the communication of its acceptance is complete
as against the proposer and not afterwards. S. 5(1). This is the case even where the offeror has
stated that his offer is open for a specific period of time. Provided his promise to keep the offer
open is not supported by consideration, it does not bind him and as such he can revoke his offer
even within the period when the offer is open. (see also s.6(a) of the LCA
• Dickinson v Dodds (1876) 2 Ch D 463
– On Wed, deft offered to sell his house to clmt and promised to leave the offer „over‟ till 9AM
on Friday
– Clmt learned on Thursday that deft was planning to sell the house to someone else
– he left a formal acceptance for the clmt same day but the deft did not see it
– At 7AM on Friday Clmt handed an „acceptance‟ to the deft but the house had been sold by then
– Held: there was no contract as the offer had been withdrawn
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– That there is neither principle nor authority for saying that there must be an express and actual
withdrawal of the offer
– That the clmt knew, through a third party, that the deft was no longer minded to sell the house
to him and this was as plain and clear as if the deft had expressly said he withdrew the offer
– That the deft would not have been able to withdraw the offer only if both parties agreed that it
was a continuing offer until acceptance
– Offer
• Note in relation to leaving the offer ‘over’
– Such a promise will only be binding if supported by consideration; sometimes called „buying
the option‟
– See Routledge v Grant 130 ER 920
Note: That the revocation must be communicated
The communication of a revocation is complete- [s. 4(3) LCA]
(a) As against the person who makes it, when it is put in the course of transmission to the person
to whom it is made, so as to be out of the power of the person who makes it.
(b) As against the person to whom it is made, when it comes to his knowledge
• Note also that the „postal rule‟ does not apply in relation to withdrawal/revocation of an offer
• Byrne v Van Tienhoven (1880) CPD 344
– Defts posted letter of offer (from Cardiff to NY) on 1 October
– Clmt received the letter on 11 October and immediately accepted by telegram
– MeanwhileDeft had posted a withdrawal on 8 October which did not reach clmt until 20
October
– Held: binding contract was made on 11 October; revocation is not effective until it is
communicated --- in this case on 20 October.
• Termination by Rejection
• Rejection may be express or by a counter-offer; a counter-offer kills off the last offer. An offer
will be held to have terminated once it has been rejected by the offeree. The rejection need not be
express, provided that the offeror is justified in inferring that the offeree does not intend to
accept the offer.
• Hyde v Wrench (1840) 3 Beav 334
– Deft offered to sell his farm to clmt for £1000
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ACCEPTANCE OF A PROPOSAL
• Acceptance – „a final and unqualified expression of assent to the terms of an offer‟
• Acceptance is a signification of willingness by the offeree to accept the offer. S. 2(1) b and a
proposal once accepted it becomes a promise.
• In order to covert a proposal into a promise, the acceptance must ( s.7(a)-(b) of LCA)
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COMMUNICATION OF ACCEPTANCE
Q. When is it complete?
The communication of acceptance is complete- [s. 4(2)]
(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
(b) As against the acceptor, when it comes to the knowledge of the proposer
assent
A supposed „acceptance‟ which varies or attempts to vary the terms of the offer is not an
acceptance --- but a counter-offer.
• Acceptance must be communicated to the offeror
– General rule: acceptance is only effective when it is brought to the attention of the offeror
– Cf. per Lord Denning in Entores v Miles Far East Corpn [1955] 2 QB 327
• Oral statement drowned by over-flying aircraft
• Telephone line goes dead in a phone conversation in which acceptance was being made
Prescribed Methods of acceptance
• Prescribed method of acceptance
• As a general rule, offeree must comply with the prescribed method, else there will be no
contract
• If prescribed method is not mandatory, any other method of acceptance that is no less
advantageous to the offeror may be sufficient
The Communication of Acceptance by Post-The postal rule
Position at Common Law
• If the post is the agreed or proper method of communicating acceptance, acceptance is
complete when the letter of acceptance is posted
See Adam V. Lindsell [1818] 106 ER 250, the court said that where acceptance is
communicated by post a contract arises on the date when the letter of acceptance is posted in due
course.
The rule was further rationalised by Thesiger, LJ in 1879 when he said; “ an acceptance which
only remains in the breast of the acceptor without being actually and by legal implication
communicated to the offeror is no binding acceptance...”
The postal rule was further consolidated in Byrne v Van Tienhoven and Henthorn v Fraser,
which in the former case the court pointed out that, a contract is complete on posting the letter of
acceptance even though the letter may not reach the offeror (its destination) and in the later case
the court ruled:-
• “Where the circumstances are such that it must have been within the contemplation of the
parties that, according to ordinary usages of mankind, the post might be used as a means of
communicating the acceptance of an offer, the acceptance is complete as soon as it is posted.”
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Communication to an agent
Where an agent is authorised to receive acceptance, then communication to the agent is as good
as communication to the principal, but where the agent‟s authority is merely to transmit the
acceptance to the principal, there is no acceptance until it is actually transmitted to the principal.
RULES GOVERNING ACCEPTANCE
(a) Acceptance must be in response to, and in exchange for the proposal
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– Husband who left his wife agreed to pay her £40 per month
– She was to make outstanding mortgage payments from that allowance
– Husband also signed a note that he would transfer the house to her when mortgage payments
were completed
– Husband later refused to transfer the house
– Held (CA): the agreement was intended to create legal relations
– “… domestic arrangements are ordinarily not intended to create legal relations. It is altogether
different when the parties are not living in amity but are separated, or about to separate. They
then bargain keenly. They do not rely on honourable undertakings. They want everything cut and
dried. It may safely be presumed that they intend to create legal relations.” Per Lord Denning
MR
Commercial Agreements
• “Rebuttable Presumption” that they are intended to create legal relations
• “Heavy” presumption; not easy to rebut; “clear” evidence to the contrary required
• Edwards v Skyways Ltd [1964] 1 WLR 349
– S promised to make an “ex gratia” payment to some employees made redundant
– S later went back on the promise to E who left the company
– S argued that though its promise was supported by consideration, it was not legally enforceable
because it was “ex gratia”
– Held (Megaw J): there was nothing in the words “ex gratia” … to warrant the conclusion that
the promise, duly made and accepted for valid consideration, was not intended by the parties to
be enforceable in law.
CONSIDERATION
Every contract must be supported with consideration
By definition, a consideration is something of value in the eyes of law or exchange of promises.
It is defined in our law under section 2(1)(d) of the Law of Contract Act, 1961.
Consideration may consist of some right, interest, profit or benefit accruing to the one party or
some forbearance, detriment, loss or responsibility.
Facts about consideration
• Consideration must be sufficient but it need not be adequate
• Consideration must move from the promise or any other persons
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FREE CONSENT
An agreement occurs when two minds meet upon a common purpose- consensus ad idem. Where
there is no such meeting there is no legally binding agreement.
In certain circumstances the following factors will act to vitiate an otherwise sound contract
[section 14(1) of LCA]
(i) Mistake
(ii) Duress and undue influence
(iii) Coercion
(iv) Misrepresentation
CAPACITY TO CONTRACT
Only persons of sound mind and who are at the age of majority and not otherwise disqualified by
law may enter into a contract.
The age of majority for Tanzania is 18 years of age. Refer section 11 of the LCA and 12(1)-(3).
Drunken persons, persons of unsound mind, and minors as a general rule cannot enter into a
contract except for necessaries.
The reason for that is that they cannot form a rational judgement.
LEGALITY OF OBJECTS
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A contract must not be illegal and if it is, has no legal effect. A contract will be illegal because
they are contrary to (i) statute (ii) common law (iii) public policy
VOID, VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
The following agreements are void [ss.24-30 LCA, 1961]
(a) Contracts prejudicial to the sanctity of marriage or in restraint of marriage.
(b) Agreements to oust the jurisdiction of the courts
(c) Agreement in restraint of trade
(d) Agreement void for uncertainty
(e) Agreement by way of wager
(f) Agreement without consideration
(g) If consideration and objects are unlawful
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
A voidable contract is a contract which is either valid or void at the option of either party to a
contract.
Voidable contracts include:-
(a) Contracts entered by coercion,section 15 and 19
(b) Contracts entered by undue influence, s.16 and 19
(c) Contracts entered by fraud, section 17 and 19
(d) Contracts entered by misrepresentation, section 18 and 19
(e) Contracts entered by mistake, section 20,21 and 23.
DISCHARGE OF CONTRACT
(i) Discharge by performance
(ii) Discharge by agreement
(iii) Discharge by frustration
E.g. (a) where there is a change of law
(b) subsequent impossibility
(c) where the subject matter is destroyed
(d) disappearance of the subject matter
(iv) Discharge by breach
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It must be a breach of a condition that goes to the root of the contract. A breach of warranty does
not justify the end of the contract.
(v) Discharge by novation
END
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