Key Cases: Contract Law

Author:   Chris Turner
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780340915004


Pages:   154
Publication Date:   31 March 2006
Replaced By:   9781444137842
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Our Price $59.40 Quantity:  
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Key Cases: Contract Law


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Overview

Key Cases has been specifically written for students studying law. It is the essential revision tool to be used on its own or with the partner Key Facts title in order to ensure a thorough knowledge of core cases for any given law topic. Understanding essential and leading cases fully is a vital part of the study of law - the clear format, style and explanations of Key Cases will ensure you have this understanding. The series is written and edited by an expert team of authors whose experience means they know exactly what is required in a revision aid. They include lecturers and barristers who have brought their expertise and knowledge to the series to make it user-friendly and accessible. Key features include: all essential and leading cases explained; user-friendly layout and style; cases broken down into key components by use of clear symbol system; pocket-sized and easily portable; highly-regarded authors and editors.

Full Product Details

Author:   Chris Turner
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Hodder Education
Dimensions:   Width: 12.90cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 19.80cm
Weight:   0.140kg
ISBN:  

9780340915004


ISBN 10:   0340915005
Pages:   154
Publication Date:   31 March 2006
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate
Replaced By:   9781444137842
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

Table of cases Chapter 1 Formation of a contract 1.1 Offer 1.1.1 The character of an offer 1.1.2 Communication of offers 1.1.3 Revocation of offers 1.1.4 Termination of offers 1.2 Acceptance 1.2.1 The basic rules of acceptance 1.2.2 The aEURO~battle of the formsaEURO (TM) 1.2.3 Communication of the acceptance 1.3 Consideration 1.3.1 Defining consideration 1.3.2 Sufficiency and adequacy of consideration 1.3.3 Past consideration 1.3.4 Consideration passing from both sides 1.3.5 Performance of existing duties 1.3.6 Pinnel's Pule and promissory estoppel 1.4 Intention to create legal relations 1.4.1 Social and domestic arrangements 1.4.2 Commercial and business dealings Chapter 2 Capacity 2.1 Corporations and capacity 2.2 Capacity and minoraEURO (TM)s contracts Chapter 3 Third party rights and privity of contract 3.1 The basic rule and its effects 3.2 Exceptions to the strict rule Chapter 4 The contents of a contract 4.1 Representations 4.2 Terms 4.2.1 Incorporating express terms into the contract 4.2.2 The 'parol evidence rule' 4.2.3 Terms implied by fact 4.2.4 Terms implied by common law 4.2.5 Terms implied by statute 4.2.6 The relative significance of terms 4.2.7 How judges construe terms 4.3 Judicial and statutory control of exclusion clauses 4.3.1 Incorporation of exclusion clauses 4.3.2 Construction of the contract 4.3.3 Other limitations on the use of exclusion clauses 4.3.4 The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 4.3.5 The Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 Chapter 5 Vitiating factors 5.1 Misrepresentation 5.1.1 'Misrepresentation' defined 5.1.2 Classes of misrepresentation and their remedies 5.1.3 Equity and misrepresentation 5.1.4 Non-disclosure amounting to misrepresentation 5.2 Mistake 5.2.1 The classes of mistake 5.2.2 Mistake and equity 5.2.3 Non est factum 5.3 Duress, economic duress, and undue influence 5.3.1 Duress 5.3.2 Economic duress 5.3.3 Undue influence 5.4 Illegality 5.4.1 Contracts illegal by statute 5.4.2 Contracts void at common law 5.4.3 Contracts illegal at common law 5.4.4 Consequences of contract being declared void 5.4.5 Consequences of contract being declared illegal Chapter 6 Discharge of a contract 6.1 Discharge by performance 6.1.1 The strict rule of performance 6.1.2 Ways of avoiding the strict rule 6.2 Discharge by agreement 6.3 Discharge by frustration 6.3.1 The purpose and development of the doctrine 6.3.2 The different types of frustrating events 6.3.3 The limitations on the doctrine of frustration 6.3.4 The common law effects of frustration 6.3.5 The Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 6.4 Discharge by breach 6.4.1 The different types of breach 6.4.2 The consequences of breach Chapter 7 Remedies 7.1 Unliquidated damages 7.1.1 Tests of causation and remoteness of damage 7.1.2 The bases of assessment 7.1.3 The duty to mitigate 7.1.4 The aEURO~mental distressaEURO (TM) cases 7.2 Liquidated damage clauses 7.3 Claims for quantum meruit 7.4 Equitable remedies 7.4.1 Specific performance 7.4.2 Injunctions 7.4.3 Rescission 7.4.4 Rectification of a document Index

Reviews

Hodder is pitching to provide all student needs from the one stable ... Clear and consistent format, style and explanations will be valued by most students ... The Key Cases books almost stand better than mere revision aids, but ultimately their length really makes them just this unless a student does use them as a point to identify issues to follow up elsewhere. -- Christopher Gale, The Law Teacher (about the series as a whole)


Author Information

CHRIS TURNER LLM is a qualified barrister and a Senior Lecturer in Law at Wolverhampton University. He is an experienced author whose other titles include Key Facts: Contract Law and Unlocking Contract Law, both published by Hodder Arnold. He is also series editor for Key Facts and Unlocking the Law. JACQUELINE MARTIN LLM has ten years' experience as a practising barrister and is an experienced author. She is also series editor for Key Facts and Unlocking the Law.

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