This document provides an overview of key concepts in Canadian law. It defines different types of law, including public law which regulates interactions with the government, and private law which regulates interactions between private individuals. It discusses the role of law in protecting people and society. It also outlines the different systems of law including criminal law, regulatory law, and civil law. A key part of the document is describing the Canadian constitution and how it divides powers between the federal and provincial governments. It also summarizes the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the rights and freedoms it protects.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in Canadian law. It defines different types of law, including public law which regulates interactions with the government, and private law which regulates interactions between private individuals. It discusses the role of law in protecting people and society. It also outlines the different systems of law including criminal law, regulatory law, and civil law. A key part of the document is describing the Canadian constitution and how it divides powers between the federal and provincial governments. It also summarizes the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the rights and freedoms it protects.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in Canadian law. It defines different types of law, including public law which regulates interactions with the government, and private law which regulates interactions between private individuals. It discusses the role of law in protecting people and society. It also outlines the different systems of law including criminal law, regulatory law, and civil law. A key part of the document is describing the Canadian constitution and how it divides powers between the federal and provincial governments. It also summarizes the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the rights and freedoms it protects.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in Canadian law. It defines different types of law, including public law which regulates interactions with the government, and private law which regulates interactions between private individuals. It discusses the role of law in protecting people and society. It also outlines the different systems of law including criminal law, regulatory law, and civil law. A key part of the document is describing the Canadian constitution and how it divides powers between the federal and provincial governments. It also summarizes the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the rights and freedoms it protects.
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Part 1 Law and Its Social and Business Context
Chapter 1 Law, Society, and Business The Role of Law How Do We Define the Law? Why do we have and need law? 1. Protect persons, property, and society as a whole Prohibits conduct society believes to be harmful Prescribes rules that allow us to get on with our everyday lives 2. Gives government the power to act for the benefit of society Power to provide policing and other essential services and to charge taxes for these things Rule of Law Established legal principles that treat all persons equally and that the government obeys. EXCEPTION: diplomatic immunity. Public Law Law that regulates the conduct of the government and the relations between government and private persons. Regulates individuals interactions with each other Plan and organize affairs Bargain with others for mutual advantages Private Law Law that regulates the relations between private persons and groups of private persons. AKA Civil Law.
Influences and controls the behaviour of individuals and society Empowers, influences and controls the actions of the government Influences and controls interaction between individuals Is It Ever Right to Break the Law? There are times, but generally the law should be obeyed There are unjust laws should be obeyed due to chaotic consequences if many people do not obey them. Speed limit is in place with safety in mind Endangered others to save life of her child she would say she was justified in breaking the law given the circumstances Is and unjust law really law? If it is very unjust, no one needs to abide by it Is there a point in having laws that no one will obey? Laws must be rooted in the morals of society in order to be effective. How Does Law Influence Behavior? Most people understand the need to comply with the law 2 Legal Liability Responsibility for the consequences of breaking the law. How offensive society finds the crime determines the area of law that regulates the behavior and the types of liability it will attract Criminal Liability Responsibility arising from commission of an offense against the government or society as a whole. Regulatory or Quasi-Criminal Liability Responsibility arising from breaches of less serious rules of public law, often enforced through regulatory tribunals set up by government for specific purposes. Civil Liability Responsibility arising from a breach of private law, enforced through a lawsuit initiated by the victim. It is possible to attract all types of liability with one offence Who Makes Law? The constitution Basic Law A constitution that is habitually obeyed by the citizens of a country and that they regard as legitimate and binding. Created by a monarch or by the government The basic law from which all others draw their power All other laws must comply with the constitution in order to be valid and enforceable Legislation AKA statute law, acts Statute A piece of legislation passed by government. Passed by Parliament and provincial legislatures in compliance with the Canadian Constitution i. Subordinate Legislation Passed under authorization of statute by a body designated in the statute, such as a cabinet or a commission Regulations Administrative rules implemented by government as a result of authorization given in a statute. 3 ii. Administrative Rulings Rulings handed down by administrative bodies created to hear complaints and applications by individuals, as outlined in legislation Court Decisions Judgments handed down by judges after hearing a court case. Court Law A collection of individual cases decided by the courts that develop and shape legal principles. Courts are central to law enforcement Legislation plays small role in private disputes Apply principles of case law developed over courts history to deliver decisions In novel situations, they develop new principles set precident Courts and Legislation Courts play important role even where legislation exists Determine if statute is valid and enforceable (based on constitution) Decide what the statute means an is it covers the subject of a dispute Federalism and the Constitution Two distinct levels of government, each independent with own sphere of activity under the Constitution Act of 1867 Powers divided between the two under sections 91 (federal) and 92 (provincial) If conflict arises, courts determine who has jurisdiction Ultra Vires Beyond the powers of the enacting government and therefore void. Residual Powers Powers that fall within the federal jurisdiction because they are not expressly allocated to the provinces in the Constitution. Usually activities developed after 1867 such as telecommunications or air traffic. Practical problems often overlap the boundaries of jurisdictions Concurrent Powers Overlapping powers of both levels of government to regulate the same activities. When conflict arises, federal legislation prevails Need for uniformity across Canada in areas of federal jurisdiction Supreme Court of Canada plays umpire role between levels of government Does not easily strike down legislation Respects intent of legislatures Only strikes down if it is inconsistent with the Constitution The Charter of Rights and Freedoms Became part of the constitution in 1982 Limits aspects of government action and protects human rights 4 Human Rights Recognized entitlement encompassing traditional freedoms associated with civil liberty and basic human necessities Property and civil rights are part of provincial responsibility Relate to ownership of property, contract law, and family relations. Charter is entrenched in the Constitution cannot be repealed by any ordinary act of legislatures Amendments require consent from Parliament, legislatures from two thirds of the provinces representing at least 50% of the population of all the provinces very difficult to change Rights in the charter cannot be infringed upon by ordinary legislation Cannot interfere with right founded on a higher law Supreme Court will strike down any legislation that violates the explicit rights in the Charter as per section 52 (1) of Constitution Has read more into the Charter to prevent discrimination based on aspects not explicitly listed in the charter Section 33 allows legislature to override certain other section of the Charter Shall operate notwithstanding clause allows legislation to do this Expires after five years unless reenacted Only do this in special circumstances Not politically easy to override human rights because it sets bad precedent No rights in the charter are absolute Section 1: all are subject to such reasonable limits prescribed by law that can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society Statute is usually presumed valid Person must show that one of their guaranteed rights has been infringed upon by a provision in the statute Statute then presumed invalid Unless government can show that the infringement was demonstrably justified Burden The requirement that, unless a party can establish facts and law to prove its case, it will lose Charter applies to government and governmental activities has little application between private persons In private sector, rights are a matter of human rights codes passed by the provinces Charter states is applies in respect of all matters within the authority of Parliament and of the legislature of each province not extended to corporations The Rights and Freedoms Protected by the Charter Subject to override through use of section 33: Fundamental Freedoms 2. Everyone has the right to the following fundamental freedoms: a) Freedom of conscience and religion; b) Freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom o the press and other media of communication; 5 c) Freedom of peaceful assembly; and d) Freedom of association. Legal Rights 7) Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. 8) Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure. 9) Everyone has the right not to be arbitrarily detained or imprisoned. 10) Everyone has the right on arrest or detention a) To be informed promptly of the reasons therefor; b) To retain and instruct counsel without delay and be informed of that right; and c) To have the validity of detention determined by way of habeas corpus and to be released if the detention is not lawful. Sections 11 14 deal with rights of those accused of crimes during criminal proceedings Equality Rights 15. (1)Every individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability. (2)Subsection (1) does not preclude any law, program or activity that has as its object the amelioration of conditions of disadvantaged individuals or groups including those that are disadvantaged because of race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability. (2) allows for reverse discrimination NOT SUBJECT TO SECTION 33: the rights and freedoms are guaranteed to men and women equally. Does (2) violate this? Not subject to legislative override: Democratic Rights 3. Every citizen of Canada has the right to cite in an election of members of the House of Commons or of a legislative assembly and to be qualified for membership therein. Mobility Rights 6. (1)Every citizen has the tight to enter, remain in and leave Canada (2)Every citizen and person with the status of permanent resident has the right a. To move to and take up residence in any province; and b. To pursue the gaining of livelihood in any province. (3)The rights in (2) are subject to a. Any laws or practices if general application in force in a province other than those that discriminate among persons primarily on the basis of province of present or previous residence; and b. Any laws providing reasonable residency requirements as a qualification for the receipt of publicly provided social services. 6 (4)Subsections (2) and (3) so not preclude any law, program or activity that has its object the amelioration in a province or conditions of individuals in that province who are socially or economically disadvantaged if the rate of employment in that province is below the rate in Canada. (4) gives affirmative action provision to give preference to local workers in areas with higher-than-average unemployment The Significance of the Charter for Business Government regulates business through legislation If it violates the Charter, it can be declared invalid Challenging the Validity of a Statute Statute is declared invalid if: Subject matter is ultra vires It violates the Charter Supreme Court must determine the purpose and effect of the statute Narrow interpretation valid Restrict meaning to small cases Broad interpretation invalid Take meaning in all possible ways Court may interpret it as partially out of the jurisdiction of the government restrict application to fewer areas legislation does not have desired effect Courts often criticized for taking too narrow of an interpretation Avoid interference with existing civil rights Constitutional defeat more serious than narrow interpretation. Defeat constitution must be changed in order to overcome court decision Interpretation introduce an amendment to broaden the application of the statute Chapter 2 The Machinery of Justice Classifying Law To help us understand organize and explain laws that govern us
Business law draws from both public and private law Substantive Law The rights and duties each person has in society. Procedural Law Rules that deal with how substantive rights and duties may be enforced. Lawmakers designate the acceptable conduct and a way to enforce it. Public Law Constitutional Criminal Taxation Private Law Contracts Torts Property 7 Substantive: Right to own property Procedural: How to protect property Legal Systems: Civil Law and Common Law Regions of the World Under Each System Two legal systems around the world: Roman Law A system developed by Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian in the 6 th century. Civil Law A system of law involving a comprehensive legislated code, evolved from Roman Law. Used in Quebec All law must be collected into a body of legislation called the civil code The code is more important than any individual case decision Always refers to code to settle a dispute Legislation > Case Law Common Law A case-based system of law originating in England and covering most of the English-speaking world. Based on recorded reasons given by courts for their decisions. Case Law Legislation The Need for Consistency and Predictability Like cases should be treated alike Judges must be influenced or concerned by previous decisions Reduces the number of cases that go to court The law itself must be fairly predictable civil law countries try to decided similar cases in similar ways even through they are not bound to do so Common Law: The Theory of Precedent Certainty vs. Flexibility Consistency and predictability are the primary goal of common law judges Theory of Precedent: follow already decided cases Stare Decisis To stand by a previous decision. Not an ironclad rule Circumstances change, so should the decisions made by the courts Judges only bound to decisions made by a higher court. Lower court decisions have influential value only Precedent only bind the same circumstances 8 Vagueness in these definitions allows judges to draw distinctions between situations and not follow precedents Distinguish Identify factual difference that renders precedent inapplicable to the case before the court. Accommodating Change Overrule To declare an existing precedent no longer binding or effective. To overrule an existing precedent, issue must be addressed by a higher court Reluctant to override decision by court at the same level takes away from the consistency and predictability The Sources of Law The Variety of Sources Courts Legislation Government Cabinet Municipalities Subordinate Legislation Law created by administrative agencies whose authority is granted by statute in order to carry out the purposes of the legislation. Statutes Codify Set down and summarize in a statute the existing common law rules governing a particular area of activity. Statutes to codify existing precedents make the law easier to access In one bill rather than in several cases Courts often called upon to interpret a statute, whether it applies the facts of a case, and what its consequences are Not likely to apply the provisions if the details of the case are not covered specifically Strict Interpretation Courts apply the provisions of a statute only where the facts of the case are covered specifically by the statute. Liberal Approach Statutory interpretation that considers legislative intent, purpose, and history of the stature, as well as the context of the language. Takes into consideration the state of the law at the time of the passage and the language used when debating the bill
Interpretation Act tells courts to take a fair, liberal and large interpretation of statutes 9 Legislation Framework Two main classes: passive and active Passive Statutes that change the law Make a formerly illegal activity legal or vice versa Provides legal framework for people to go about their business Does not propose to supervise or regulate these activities Leaves it to an injured party or enforcement official to complain and initiate court proceedings Active Legislation Gives government power to carry out a program Parliament itself is not the right body to carry out the program Agencies created through legislation execute the projects authorized by the government Subordinate Legislation Administrative agencies create new law by exercising their regulatory powers Set out broad or detailed criteria Important regulations require authorizations by the Cabinet in form of order-in-council Agency drafts regulations and minister responsible for agency brings it forward for approval Less important regulations can be approved by the minister, head of the agency or designated officer Case Law: Judge-Made Law The Common Law Case law still represents the bulk of private law, especially for contract disputes System of Courts The organization of courts into a hierarchy that designates the responsibilities of the court and determines the importance of the precedent. Usually has three levels: trial, appeal, and final appeal. Common law is based on the flow of cases from the system of courts, the decisions need to be with a recognized level of court in order to influence other judges decisions Collection of case law precedents = common law Earliest decisions made without benefit of precedent had to look to outside sources for direction Canon Law Created by the Church, which had its own jurisdiction and courts in matters pertaining to itself, family law, and wills. 10 Feudal Law A system of land ownership rooted in sovereign ownership: exchange of land handed down from royals in exchange for military service and loyalty. Merchant Law Rules and trade practices developed by merchants and administered by their own courts As number of precedents increased the need to draw from outside sources was reduced Equity Common law system was originally very rigid Needed specific writ to have case heard by court Writ An ancient form required in order to take a grievance to court. As times changed the appropriate writs were not available, king would hear petitions, make decisions inconsistent with existing common law Kings chancellor began to take over this job Courts of Chancery A system of courts under the kings chancellor and vice-chancellor developed from the hearing of petitions to the king AKA Courts of Equity Created exceptions to common law rules when they were too harsh, created new precedents: called principles of equity Common law remedies were too narrow (money damages only) and did not meet needs of Equitable Remedies New remedies created by the courts of equity to address situations where money damages did not solve the problem Courts of equity were prepared to grant equitable remedies who would not carry our the court order would be jailed Specific Performance An order by a court of equity to carry out a binding obligation. Contempt of Court A finding by a court that a party refused to obey it and will be punished. Remedies in court of equity were discretionary Depended on the innocence of the petitioner and the hardship suffered Pioneered legal concepts of trust and loyalty and considering the relative positions of the parties when applying the law Merger of the Courts British government decided to merge the courts in 1867, Canadian provinces followed shortly afterwards 11 Judges are now supposed to apply both equity and precedent The System of Courts in Canada Provinces have jurisdiction over the administration of justice Federal government has jurisdiction over trade and commerce, bankruptcy and criminal law The Provincial Court System Deals with most matters of private and public law Courts of First Instance Witnesses give evidence and initial judgments are made Topic of dispute determines which trial court it goes to Inferior Trial Courts Created by provincial legislation for a specific purpose. Small Claims Court Private disputes for small amounts of money Maximum amounts vary by province Procedure is simple cost of taking action is small Consumer and client disputes are handled here Provincial Division Decides mostly criminal law Except most serious criminal offences No jury trials Holds preliminary hearings to see of there is enough evidence to go to Superior Court trial Some provinces have different division for family law Superior Trial Courts Constitutionally created courts presided over by federally appointed judges. Surrogate Court (Probate Court) Supervises estates of deceased persons Appoints an administrator to: Settle affairs of people without wills Determine validity of wills and division of assets Approves accounts of executors and administrators Some provinces have these as part of their Superior Court system Supreme Court of Canada Provincial Court of Appeal Superior Courts of First Instance Inferior Courts of First Instance Federal Court of Appeal Federal Court Trial Division Tax Court 12 General Division or Superior Court Unlimited jurisdiction in civil and criminal actions Federally appointed judges Hears criminal matters, and civil cases out of the jurisdiction of Small Claims Court Court of appeal for less serious criminal matters heard in Provincial Division Intermediate Appellate Court The Cr5t6yourt of Appeal Each province has one Same function as the Court of Appeal in England All matters arising out of court of first instance are first appealed here The Federal Courts Supreme Court of Canada Final court of appeal Hears appeal from provincial courts of appeal and the Federal Court of Canada Under Supreme Court Act has rule on constitutionality of federal and provincial statutes Matter has to be of national importance to be granted leave many cases the Court of Appeal is the final court of appeal Courts of First Instance Tax Court of Canada Hears the appeals of taxpayers against assessments by the Canada Revenue Agency Only hears tax appeals with simple procedures Decisions may be appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal The Federal Court of Canada Trial and appeal divisions Appeals on decisions made by the Federal Court of Appeal go to the Supreme Court of Canada Disputes concerning ships and navigation, copyright Some concurrent jurisdiction shared with provincial courts Intermediate Level Appeal Federal Court of Appeal Hears appeals from Federal Tax Court and Federal Court of Canada Trial Division Procedural Law: Using the Courts Rules of Civil Procedure The provincial regulations that set out the steps in a private lawsuit, including forms, fees, and timelines. Who May Sue? 13 Adult citizens of Canada Non-Canadians EXCEPTION: during hostilities, enemy aliens lose this right Corporations Foreign ones may be subject to more strict regulation and may need a provincial license before they may do so Considered a legal person or entity An action is brought on by a person, either for their own benefit or someone elses Unincorporated Collectivity A group of persons that in most cases are not recognized by the courts and that may not sue or be sued. EXCEPTION: trade unions may sue and be sued in some places Standing to Sue Individuals whose rights have been specifically affected have standing to sue Means must be available to the public to protect their interests if no government body will do so Class Actions One case represents issue felt by a number of individuals Courts reluctant to take away individuals right to litigate their claim Do not want to clog the system with multiple identical cases Case not worth the cost unless multiple plaintiffs pool resources Plaintiff () The party that commences a private legal action against another party Class Action And action in which an individual represents a group of possible plaintiffs and the judgment decides the matter for all the members of the class at once. Consumers often commence class actions against businesses Court must approve basis of class action before it can proceed Identify a common class and common issues Determine that a class action is the preferable procedure Res Judicata A case that has already been decided by a court and cannot be brought before a court again. Judgment resulting from a class action suit cannot be brought before a court again to contest legal liability Settlement Out of Court Advantages Settlement An out-of-court procedure by which one of the parties agrees to pay a sum of money or perform an act in return for a waiver by the other party of all rights arising from the grievance 4% civil trial rate Many cases settle out of court Faster and less expensive than going through the court system 14 Avoids risk that court will rule against them Many actions are settled soon after they have started Growing Delay in the Court System Number of cases going to trial has increased (not percentage) Causes backlog in many cases getting heard Injured has to wait several years to get compensation Witnesses cannot recall information as well Rules have been created to encourage settlement: 1. Parties must attend settlement conferences as part of pre-trial procedure Judges offer opinions on possible trial outcomes and settlement offers 2. Parties who do not accept reasonable offers of settlement are penalized If court can show that offer was essentially the same as the court order the party will be ordered to pay the costs incurred by the other party 3. Alternative dispute resolution is encouraged by courts Procedure Before Trial Well defined procedure allows courts to work effectively Action Lawsuit. Issuing Commencing the lawsuit by filing a copy of the statement of claim with the court office. Serving Providing a copy of the issued claim to each defendant. Cause of Action An event or set of events that gives rise to a legal liability. Most litigations goes in form of action initiated by issuing and serving a writ or statement of claim which describes the cause of action
Defendant is served so they know what they are being sued for and by who. Entering (filing) an Appearance Filing a notice of an intention to consent to action. Statement of Defense A reply to a statement of claim, admitting facts not in dispute, denying other facts, and setting out facts in support of the defense. Counterclaim A claim by arising form the same facts as the original action by to be tried along with that action. 1. sets out in detail the facts that allegedly have given rise to the cause of action and the damages suffered 15 who intends to consent to the action enters and appearance and replies with a statement of defense may reply countering the alleged facts presented by the will then counter claim and the claims can be tried together Pleadings Document filed by each party to an action providing information it intends to provide in court. 2. The documents are assembled to form the main body of the pleadings Court will refuse to hear surprise evidence May demand particulars so a claim may be investigated further Examination for Discovery Process allowing either party to examine the other or their evidence in order to narrow the issues. 3. Form some kind of examination for discovery to narrow issues or decide whether to proceed with trial at all Learn about strength of other partys case so a settlement decision can be made if necessary If both are satisfied that the action should go to trial, they ask official to place it on the docket for next sitting of the court 4. Generally, pre-trial or settlement conferences with a judge or mediator are required after discovery Issues in the dispute are reviewed in an attempt to settle or at least narrow issues to that the eventual trial will be shorter The Trial Burden of proof is on Must prove on a balance of probabilities Everyone brings all evidence and apply the law to the facts in favorable way Counsel for calls witnesses favourable to the client Counsel for can cross-examine the witnesses for aspects of their testimony that were neglected that would serve position Counsel for may then reexamine the witness to clarify any points in the cross- examination Counsel for may also call witnesses Admissible Evidence Evidence that is acceptable to the court. Hearsay Words attributed by a witness to a person who is not before the court. Evidence may not be admissible because they do not add to the facts or they are hearsay Must separate bad evidence from good 16 After all evidence is heard, counsel for each presents arguments in law that are favorable to their clients Reserve Judgment Postpone giving judgment decision after the hearing ends Judge may give decision right away, usually reserve judgment to review the arguments and consult other cases Appeals Must give notice that they will appeal within a given time frame, usually 30 days Costs Who Provides Funds for the Court System Government pays expenses of sustaining the court system Salaries Maintaining the court buildings Litigants pay overhead costs Issuing a writ Registering a judgment Solicitor-Client Fees Litigants pay their lawyers fees associated with the litigation Legal Aid A system where the government pays for many legal services provided to low-income litigants. Solicitor-Client Fee Payment for the time and expenses of a lawyer in preparing a case and representing the client in negotiations to settle or in court. Party and Party Costs Loser pays rule Party and Party Costs An award that shifts some of the costs of litigation to the losing side according to a published scale of fees. Total Costs of Litigation Solicitor-client fee is almost always grater than an award of party and party costs Some times these fees are awarded if the judge feels the losing party behaved unreasonably If the client and lawyer cannot come to a reasonable settlement of the bill it is referred to an officer of the court Contingent Fees Origins in the United States US does not follow loser pays rule 17 Contingency Fee A fee paid for a lawyers services only if the client is successful; therefore, no charge if the client is unsuccessful. Contingency fees developed to give access to litigants who do not have the financial means to pay fees associated with litigation Criticism Clogs American justice system with litigants who have small chance of winning Discourages litigation of small claims Fails to compensate justly the winner whose claim has been vindicated Use in Canada Canada was slow to adopt due to concerns that contingency arrangements would: Encourage unnecessary litigation; Expose defendants to the costs of defending themselves against claims that have no merit; Encourage clients to agree to unreasonable large percent fees demanded by lawyer; Cloud judgment of lawyer (becomes stakeholder in litigation) Was accepted in Canada eventually Some provinces have limits on the % of the recovery the lawyer can charge. Alternative Dispute Resolution Rising delays in court system made informal ways to resolve disputes more popular Alternative Dispute Resolution Using private procedures instead of the courts to resolve disputes. Arbitration Arbitration Act governs this process Arbitrator is hired by both parties to adjudicate the matter Will hear both sides and their witnesses in private Deliver a decision with reasons Confidential and binding Parties design own process for arbitration: Arbitrator The rules of the arbitration The law that will be applied Can be a pre-dispute term in contracts or agree to arbitration after dispute arises Mediation Neutral third party acts a mediator in settlement negotiations Decision not binding, only to assist in reaching a settlement 18 Evaluative Offers an opinion Facilitative Guides the process only Mediator makes preliminary remarks Each side presents position Meetings with each side separately to explore the possible settlements Confidentiality cannot use information from mediation as evidence, cannot call mediator as witness in court Benefits: Speed Cost reduced time saves money, usually cooperate to avoid delays, they DO have to pay for the fees themselves Choice of adjudicator or mediator can pick someone with expertise in the area of the dispute, rather than a randomly appointed judge Confidentiality agree to keep dispute private to minimize the harm to their business Preserving ongoing relations less adversarial than litigation, usually will be able to continue to work together after the dispute has ended ADR created to solve business disputes that domestic legal systems cannot handle Courts tend to uphold decisions made by adjudicators Many court systems recommend or require that ADR is attempted before bringing issue to court The Legal Profession Solicitor An office lawyer in England who interviews clients, carries on legal aspects of the business and family affairs, and prepares cases for trial. Barrister A lawyer in England who accepts cases from solicitors and presents them in court, and also acts a consultant in complex legal issues. Brief Case handed from a solicitor to a barrister. In Common law provinces, all lawyers are qualified to act a barristers and solicitors Notary Solicitor in Quebec. Advocate Barrister in Quebec. Attorney A lawyer in the United States, encompassing roles of barrister and solicitor. 19 Legal profession organized on a provincial basis Must be a member of the barristers society of that province Membership in one province does not permit practice in another province Member from any province may appear before Supreme Court of Canada Disbarred Expelled from the law society and deprived of the privilege of practicing law. Law societies have standards governing lawyers relationship with clients, courts, administration of justice, and the public Honesty Integrity Confidentiality Competency Solicitor-Client Privilege A clients right to have all communication with his or her lawyer kept confidential. Paralegal A non-lawyer who provides some form of legal service to the public. Unregulated ones provide a risk, they are not subject to educational standards, licensing, professional standards, or discipline Must be licensed in Ontario Business and the Legal Profession How should businesses go about hiring lawyers? Retain Hire as needed Retain The contract between a lawyer and client that describes the work that will be done and the fee that will be charged. Outside Counsel Self-employed lawyers who work alone, in small partnerships, or in large national firms, and bill the business for the service rendered. Most business use some outside counsel Can select lawyer with the specialty needed In-House Counsel A lawyer who provides legal services to a business as a full-time employee of the business. For businesses with regular legal needs May need to hire outside counsel for situations not in their expertise Often supervises compliance officers Compliance Officers Employees that monitor regulatory and legislative requirements applicable to the business and ensure that the business complies. 20 Part 2 Torts Chapter 3 The Law of Torts The Scope of Tort Law Tort A wrongful act causing harm to the person or property of another. Purpose: to compensate victims for harm caused by the activities of others Punishment left to criminal law A tort identifies a set of circumstances that creates a right to claim compensation Development of the Tort Concept Early on: someone who caused direct injury to another has to pay compensation. No inquiry about the reasons or whether it was intentional or unintentional Strict Liability Liability that is imposed based upon causation regardless of fault. Prima face on its face Idea developed that a person should not be responsible if they acted without fault. Evolved in two ways: 1. Fault of 2. Causation whether conduct could be considered the cause of the harm The Basis for Liability Fault must show that is at fault Fault Unjustifiable injurious conduct that intentionally or carelessly disregards the interests of others. Deterrent effect People will be more careful of they have to pay for their carelessness Highly publicized awards of damages deter others from making the same error Shortfalls of entirely fault based system If not fault can be established, a victim may not receive compensation Tendency for overcompensation Strict Liability For activities that are inherently dangerous regardless of amount of care taken Take into account the risks in cost of product or service or insurance Most often imposed by legislation Courts do have raised standards of care as the danger associated with an activity increases Often impossible to show that you have met this standard of care 21 Public Policy Change as our social standards change Force law to adapt Direct legislation Judge and jury changing decisions about liability and compensation. Public Policy Considerations or objectives that are considered beneficial to society as a whole. Determine whether liability should be based on fault, strict liability, or other No-Fault Insurance A system of compulsory insurance that eliminates fault as a basis for claims. Car insurance Workers compensation In most areas or tort law, liability is imposed on a fault basis. Vicarious Liability
Victim can sue the employer (who has greater ability to pay) or the employee Employee may be compensated by the employer if they are sued Employer may sue the employee if they are sued by the victim Vicarious Liability The liability of an employer to compensate for torts committed by an employee during the course of his or her employment. Intentional Torts Intentional torts are those where the activity or conduct is done deliberately. Harm or damage must occur for any tort to be actionable List of torts grows as courts impose liability for new behaviors causing harm Trespass Unlawful entering, or remaining, on the land of another without permission. Trespass to the Person Assult The threat of violence to a person. Battery Unlawful physical contact with a person. May be a criminal offence, may also be liable in tort to compensate victim Employee Employer Victim 22 Not usually fruitful actions battery and assult actions against attackers Nuisance Public Nuisance Interference with the lawful use of public amenities. Prosecuted but government agency on behalf of the public Individual who is able to shoe special injury that is greater than those suffered by others may bring action Private Nuisance Interference with an occupiers use and enjoyment of their land. Includes tenants courts weigh the degree of interference with the occupiers use of their land and the economic importance of the offending activity
False Imprisonment Unlawful restraining or confining of another person. False Arrest Causing a person to be arrested without reasonable cause. Causing confinement or preventing them from leaving where they are Does not need to be physical restraint or the threat of it being applied Liability arises when confronting a member of the public when there is not strong evidence that a crime has been committed Malicious Prosecution Causing a person to be prosecuted for a crime without an honest belief that the crime was committed. Defamation Making an untrue statement that causes injury to the reputation of another person. Requires publication (communicating the statement to someone other that the person defamed) must demonstrate that serious allegation were made about character or ability causing real and significant injury to their reputation Libel Written defamation Slander Spoken defamation Defenses against Defamation Charge 1. Show that the statement is true must demonstrate or prove this 2. Absolute Privilege Complete immunity from liability for defamation Words in parliamentary debate, proceedings in court, before royal commission 23 Promotes candid discussion 3. Qualified Privilege Immunity from liability for defamation provided a statement was made in good faith. 4. Fair Comment Comment that is researched an offered, it is a reasonable opinion that is honestly held. 5. Responsible communication on matter of public interest A defense to defamation when the publication of the statement is in the public interest and was done responsibly Other Intentional Torts Related to Business Collectively known as economic torts, two types: Related to carrying on a business Inducing a Breach of Contract Intentionally causing one party to breach their contract with another. A convinces B to breach contract with C, C may sue A and B Unlawful Interference with Economic Relations Attempting by threats or other unlawful means to induce one person to discontinue business relations with another. Relating to false advertising in relation to anothers product Product Defamation Making false and damaging statements about the products of another person. Passing Off Representing ones own goods as those of another. Unintentional Torts Involve behavior that is not done deliberately. Happened unexpectedly, by mistake or accident Negligence The careless causing of injury to the person or property of another. Elements of Proof The following must be proven by in order to receive damages: 1. owed a duty of care A relationship so close that one must take reasonable steps to avoid causing harm to the other. Duty only arises if could have reasonably foreseen harm to the or someone in their position Are there any considerations that should limit: The scope of the duty The class of persons to whom it is owed 24 Damages to which a breach of it may give rise 2. breached the required standard of care The level of care that a person must take in the circumstances. Law puts general duty on people to avoid causing injury to others Legislation can set this out for particular activities 3. s conduct caused injury or damage to but for test If not for the negligent conduct of , injury would not have occurred No matter how blameworthy, person will not be liable for damage they did not cause material contribution test Behavior of created an unreasonable risk and it would offend notions of fairness to deny recovery Injury may be result from two or more negligent acts from different Remoteness of Damage A person will not be liable for consequences of actions if they are considered to be too remote Was the damage reasonably foreseeable? Defenses to Negligence s own actions can be partial of full defense to negligence Contributory Negligence A partial defense to a negligence action when s conduct also contributed to the injury loss will be apportioned according to the degree of fault Post-injury conduct can contribute to severity of an injury is expected to act reasonably to mitigate any damage suffered Mitigate Duty to act reasonably and quickly to minimize the extent of damage suffered. Voluntary Assumption of Risk A defense to a negligence action when was aware of the risk and continued the activity anyway. The Relevance of Insurance Loss often falls on insurance company Courts do not consider having insurance a mitigation strategy Cannot recover from insurance company and Subrogation 25 Where one person becomes entitled to the rights and claims of another. Insurance company becomes subrogated to the insured partys rights after they have collected from them Usually easier to recover damages from insurance company then from trying to sue Product Liability A tort imposing liability on manufacturers for harm caused by defective products. Circumstantial Evidence Principle A prima facie case of negligence may be established by drawing from reasonable inferences from the circumstances surrounding the product manufacture and failure Up to manufacturer to show that they cannot be held responsible for the cause of the defect or they took all reasonable precautions to prevent the defective good from reaching the distribution system. Burden of Proof In these cases may often have no way of knowing how the manufacturers actions caused the injury Need to show an uncharacteristic malfunction that is the most likely cause of the injury and the manufacturing process is the likely reason for the malfunction Then must show they are not at fault Inherently Dangerous Products Harm can be caused of product is not used properly Manufacturers duty to inform consumers of such dangers Duty to Warn Manufacturers responsibility to make users aware of the risks associated with the use or misuse of the product. Applies after product is distributed Claim based on a breach of the duty to warn Show: Duty was owed Warning was deficient Would not have used product in the way they did if they had been provided with the warning Tortfeasor Insurance Company T Victim Insurance Company V 26 Occupiers Liability To whom is a duty owed? What standards should the occupier meet? Occupiers Liability A tort imposing liability on occupants ofland for harm suffered by visitors to the property. Distinctions used to be made between the types of visitors: Invitee A person permitted by an occupier to enter the premises for business purposes. Licensee A visitor, other than a licensee, who enters the premises with consent of the occupier. This distinction was abolished in most provinces Same standard of care is applied to invitees and licensees Trespasser A person who enters premises without the permission of the occupier. Must not set out to deliberately harm them or disregard the possibility that their acts might injure a trespasser common humanity Remedies The purpose of tort law is to compensate an injured party. Damages A sum of money awarded as compensation for a loss or injury. Used to compensate fro physical (damaged property or injured people) and economic (lost monetary value) losses Point is to restore to the position they would have been in had the tort not occurred, not usually to punish the wrongdoer Punitive or Exemplary Damages Damages awarded with the intention of punishing a wrongdoer. In cases, such as deliberate libel to malicious false imprisonment Two types of Damages: 1. Special Damages to compensate for quantifiable injuries. 2. General Damages to compensate for injuries that cannot be expressed in monetary terms.
Remedies other than damages are available, rarely awarded. Restitution An order to restore property wrongfully taken. 27 Injunction An order restraining a person from doing, or continuing to do, a particular act. Mandatory Injunction An order requiring a person to do a particular act. Chapter 4 Professional Liability: The Legal Challenge Growing reliance on professionals (people with specialized knowledge and skills that their clients are willing to pay for, usually licensed and belong to a professional organization) How to assign liability for professional incompetence and negligence? Liability of Professionals Liability can arise from three relationships: 1. Contractual relationship leads to a breach of contract cause of action; 2. Fiduciary relationship leads to breach of fiduciary duty; and/or 3. The duty of care owed in tort leads to a tort cause of action. Contractual Obligations Agreement to provide professional services to client comes with promise to perform the services with competency Fiduciary Duty Professionals duty may extend beyond the terms of their contract Fiduciary Duty A duty imposed on a person who stands in a special relation of trust to another. Law can impose this duty on professional to their client Three characteristics: 1. The fiduciary (often a professional) has scope for the exercise of some discretion or power. 2. The fiduciary can unilaterally exercise that power or discretion so as to affect the beneficiarys legal or practical interests. 3. The beneficiary is particularly vulnerable to or is at the mercy of the fiduciary holding the discretion or power. Some relationships are inherently so (lawyer-client, doctor-patient), but not all professional relationships are If fiduciary duty is found to exist, there are a wider range of obligations than expressed in the contract. Must act honestly, in good faith, and only in the best interests of the client. Liability for breach of this duty can arise without negligence Conflict of Interest A situation where a duty is owed to a client whose interests conflict with the interests of the professional, another client, or another person to whom a duty is owed. 28 A fiduciary should not place themselves in a conflict of interest, has a duty not to profit at a clients expense Tort Liability When a professional deliberately or carelessly causes damage to a client. Contract breach and tort liability may occur at the same time Expands possible beyond clients who have paid for advice, others can rely on opinion given to a single client Third-Party Liability Liability to some other person who stands outside a contractual relationship. Choosing a Cause of Action may be liable under any combination of contract, fiduciary, and tort. must choose which they will sue for (court will not award triple damages) Does it matter which they choose? Rules governing time restrictions may make it advantageous to sue in tort Clients own negligence may be used a defense Terms in contract limiting liability will be used to defend contract action. Might also affect the amount of damages awarded Measure of damages not the same in contract and tort In fiduciary, may be under a duty to account for any profit derived from the breach in addition to damages Duty to Account The duty of a person who commits a breach of trust to hand over any profits derived from the breach. Tort Liability for Inaccurate Statements Misrepresentation Deceit An intentional tort imposing liability when damage is caused by a false statement made with the intention of misleading another person. Also when someone deliberately withholds or conceals information Victim who relies reasonably on the statement and suffers a loss may recover from the person who made it Fraudulent Misrepresentation An intentional tort imposing liability for an incorrect statement made knowingly with the intention of causing injury to another. Deceit and fraudulent misrepresentation require some guilty knowledge or willful disregard for the falseness of the information 29 Negligent Misrepresentation An unintentional tort imposing liability when an incorrect statement is made without due care for its accuracy, and injury is caused. Involving owing a duty of care and breaching the standard of care, reliance on the statement which resulted in damage The Duty of Care Duty of care must exist in order to be liable for negligent misrepresentation Sufficiently close relationship, with reasonable contemplation on part of they would conclude carelessness on their part may cause damage to Eligible must be reasonably foreseeable to the professional Indeterminate Liability Inability to be determined so that the magnitude of liability cannot be predicted, anticipated, or planned for. Not a component of statutory duty of care Proving Negligent Misrepresentation must prove the following: 1. There must be a duty of case based on a special relationship between representor and representee; 2. The representation in question must be untrue, inaccurate, or misleading; 3. The representor must have acted negligently in making the misrepresentation Must have fallen below the requisite standard of care of a professional making such a representation 4. The representee must have relied, in a reasonable manner, on the negligent misrepresentation; and 5. The reliance must have been detrimental to the representee in the sense that damages resulted. Accuracy of the Statement Professionals often provide opinions and not factual statements Easy to test the accuracy of a fact Value judgments are considered facts when expressed by an expert Accuracy assessed at the time the statement was given When statements are about future performance they are assessed based on this Inaccuracy must result from the failure of the professional to meet the required standard of care. Standard of Care for Professionals Must exercise the same level of skill and possess the same level of knowledge as is generally expected of members of that profession Determined through: Code of conduct published by a profession 30 Testimony of practitioners who state what they consider proper standard Not always an adequate defense must commensurate with the particular task undertaken (when they take on task beyond usual scope of profession) Omissions Standard of care includes not omitting essential information Sometimes partial or incomplete information = negligent misrepresentation In the case of medical procedures: If the patient would have decided against the, having been informed of all the risks, the doctor is liable, otherwise they are not Reliance and Detriment Causation in professional-client relationships is based on reliance The advice must be used by the to make the decision that triggered their loss for the professional to be liable Reliance Acting in a certain way because one believed the information received. Detrimental Reliance The worsening of ones position after acting up false information. Part 3 Contracts Chapter 5 Formation of a Contract: Offer and Acceptance Contracts are voluntary legal relationships, unlike legal obligations, such as tort and criminal liability Allows parties to create legal obligations that do not already exist Unfairness can arise when there is a difference in bargaining power Nature of a Contract Not all promises are contract, they can be just moral obligations, not legal ones Contract A set of promises the law will enforce. Nature of an Offer Contract not in existence until offer is made by one party and accepted by the other Offer A description of a promise one party is wiling to make, subject to the agreement of the other party. Offeror The person making the offer. Offeree The person to whom the offer is made. Invitation to do business offer to make a contract 31 Display of a product is not an offer to sell cannot guarantee all that there will be enough for everyone who wants to buy them Advertisement to sell at certain price does not mean they have to sell it to everyone who reads the ad Advertisements can be offers Sell certain quantity at a certain price to a number of customers Reward for returning lost object The Communication of an Offer Form is not important as long as it is heard and understood Usually orally or in writing, can be by conduct without words (taxis) Offeree cannot accept an offer until they are aware of it Do not have to pay people who do work for us without our knowledge If someone accepts services or uses goods, they are presumed to have accepted the offer BC Practices and Consumer Protection Act section 12 1. A consumer has no legal obligation in respect of unsolicited goods or services unless and until the consumer expressly acknowledges to the supplier in writing his or her intention to accept the goods or services. 2. Unless the consumer has given the acknowledgment referred to in subsection (1), the supplier does not have a cause of action for any loss, use, misuse, possession, damage or misappropriation in respect of the goods or services or the value obtained by the use of the goods or services. Ontario Consumer Protection Act Section 13 has a similar provision to section 12 of BCs Section 68: 1. Despite section 13, a consumer who applies for a credit card without signing an application form or who receives a credit card from a credit card issuer without applying for it shall be deemed to have entered into a credit agreement with the issuer with respect to the card on first using the card. Written Offers Standard Form Contracts: Their Risks and Benefits Offers not always in writing, but businesses that sell to the general public usually present terms of offer to customers in written documents or notices on websites Tickets for theatres, airlines, credit card arrangements, insurance, etc. Standard Form Contract An offer presented in a printed document or notice, the terms of which cannot be changed by the offeree, but must be accepted as is or rejected. Benefits Efficient Standardizing business 32 Criticism Exploits the spread in bargaining power between large corporations and consumers Often have no other choice but to accept the offer Protection from inequality in bargaining positions: 1. Business are in area regulated by a government board contracts are subject to the boards approval 2. Segment of the public are offered protection such as disclosure of requirements and post-acceptance cancellation options 3. Where there is no regulation consumers have as much protection as the courts can find under general contract law Required Notice of Terms Courts begin by assuming that an unqualified acceptance of an offer is an acceptance of every term of that offer If someone is not aware of a clause, court determines if sufficient steps were made to bring the term to the attention of the customer What are sufficient steps? Providing a written document signed by the party Giving a written notice of specific terms clear before or at the time of the contract Prominent public notice that is plain for the offeree to see when they make the contract Unusual or Unexpected Terms Terms that you would not reasonably assume are part of the contract These need to be brought directly to the attention of the offeree The Lapse and Revocation of an Offer Lapse When an offer has lapsed the offeree can no longer accept, even if they are unaware that is has lapsed, the offer becomes void and no longer exists. An offer can lapse in the following ways: 1. The offeree fails to accept within a time specified in the offer 2. The offeree fails to accept within a reasonable time, if the offer does not have a specified time limit 3. When either party dies or loses legal capacity prior to acceptance It is often difficult to determine what a reasonable amount of time is for each situation Revocation Offeror is able to revoke at any time before acceptance, even if it has promised to hold an offer open for a specified time They must ensure notice of revocation is communicated directly to the offeree 33 Options Offeree may want to bind an offeror to keep its offer for a specified time by 1. The offer itself stating that it is irrevocable 2. A subsequent contract may be made to keep it open Option A contract to keep an offer open for a specified time in return for a sum of money. Offeree agrees to pay a money if in return the offeror agrees to: 1. Keep the offer open for a specified time 2. Not to make any contracts with other parties that would prevent the offeror from fulfilling its offer Exercise an Offer Accept the offer in an option. Rejection and Counter-Offer by the Offeree There is no contract until one party accepts an offer from another without alteration Counter-offer = rejection of the old offer, brings it to an end Re-offering it is the only way it can be accepted after this When there are inquiries about whether the terms offered are the best they can expect, this is not a rejection The Elements of Acceptance Positive an Unconditional Must be certain and unconditional and a positive act, in words or conduct Shaking hands generally regarded as acceptance of last offer If conduct happens to comply with the means of acceptance laid out by the other party, may not amount to an acceptance do not have to abandon normal conduct to avoid contract Silence can only be used in certain circumstances (book club) Negative Option Billing A practice of adding services and sending bills without request and relying upon the customer to cancel if they dont wish the service. Customers can ask for refund for unsolicited goods or negative option billing Communication to the Offeror Generally, acceptance has to be communicated to the offeror Offeror can ask that specific act be performed and that will amount to acceptance The Moment of Acceptance Have to be able to analyze business negotiations to identify: 1. Who made the offer; 2. When it was communicated; and 3. When and by whom the offer was accepted. 34 Inviting Tenders Seeking offers from suppliers. Obtain firm offers for fixed quantity of something over a fixed time period Explore the market of available suppliers and determine best terms for proceeding Tender process can be two contracts: Inviting tenders amounts to an offer to enter into a construction contract of selected according to the criteria Promises to consider the tender and to accept the most attractive tender compliant with the specifications. Submission of a bid is considered acceptance, then acceptance of that bid enters them into another contract with the Some circumstances there is no intention to form a contract Standing Offer An offer that may be accepted as needed from time to time. Terms of the invitation to tender will determine which purpose is intended. Transactions Between Parties a Great Distance From Each Other Modes of Acceptance Offeror can expressly state how acceptance is to be communicated Otherwise can communicate in any way Mailbox Rule If an offeror uses mail to communicate an offer, it is reasonable to assume that the offeree will respond by mail, although faster methods are usually valid acceptance. The contract is in place when the letter of acceptance is put into the mailbox All other methods of acceptance, offeror is not bound until acceptance reaches them and must reach them before it has lapsed Mailbox rule does not apply when acceptance by mail is not reasonably contemplated, valid when received Modes of Revocation Revocation by instantaneous methods must reach the offeree to be valid By post is only effective when it is received by the offeree, unlike the rule with acceptance Rules: Unless the offeree knows that the revocation will not reach the offeree at their usual address, delivery at that address establishes fact and time of revocation. Determining the Jurisdiction Where a Contract Is Made Parties to contract often in different provinces or countries If dispute arises where should it be handled? Jurisdiction The province, state, or country whose laws apply to a particular situation. 35 Dispute will be handled where acceptance became effective Unilateral and Bilateral Contracts The Offer of a Promise for an Act Unilateral Contracts A contract in which the offer is accepted by performing an act or a series of acts required by the terms of the offer. Offeror can revoke before the necessary actions are complete, offeree could endure considerable hardships To avoid this, courts treat offers as calling for bilateral action when the language can be fairly so constructed Subsidiary Promise An implied promise that the offeror will not revoke once the offeree begins performance in good faith and continues to perform. The Offer of a Promise for a Promise Bilateral Contract A contract where offeror and offeree trade promises and both are bound to perform. Credit sale (goods not delivered by the seller or not paid for by the buyer) Promisor A party who accepts an obligation to perform according to the terms of the contract. Promisee A party who has the right to performance according to the terms of a contract. Both parties are promisor and promisee in bilateral contracts Formation of Internet Contracts e-commerce legislation Modified contract formation to allow clicking an icon to satisfy acceptance and communication requirements fro contract formation Ontario Consumer Protection Act Section 38: before a consumer enters into an internet agreement, the supplier need to disclose information about: Total price Terms of payment Warranties Among other things Section 38 (2) the supplier shall provide the consumer with an express opportunity to accept or decline the agreement and to correct errors immediately before entering into it. Contradicts normal contract law 36 Uncertainty in the Wording of an Offer Vague offer may not be an offer may not be an offer, acceptance of it may not form a contract Of court deems it too ambiguous to enforce Wording that seems uncertain can be given meaning through local customs to trade usage that gives it new precision Courts hold that: 1. Anything is certain that capable of being calculated or ascertained, and 2. Where a contract may be constructed as either enforceable or unenforceable, they will favour the interpretation that will see the contract enforced Chapter 6 Formation of a Contract: Consideration and Intention Bargain The price each party pays for the promise of the other. Unilateral = the act done by the offeree Bilateral = each partys promise Consideration The price for which the promise of the other is bought. An accepted offer is not an enforceable unless it has consideration Gratuitous Promises A promise made without bargaining for or accepting anything in return. Not a contract since no value is exchanged If promisor does not perform there is no legal remedy for the promise Charities Usually rely on donor to honour pledge Have sued estates of deceased people who died before honouring large pledges Court have to find implied request that the promisor that the charity undertake a project as the price for the pledge Can make pledges legally binding by using donor cards Adequacy of Consideration Courts will not make personal value judgments Only consider adequacy of settlement if there is allegation of wrongdoing by one party Fraud, duress, undue influence Settlements can be upset by subsequent information; they are still binding Motive Contrasted with Consideration: Past Consideration Motive a persons reason for making a promise is irrelevant Motive cannot turn a promise into a contract or vice versa Promising a reward to someone who previously performed a gratuitous act is not binding This is also gratuitous 37 Past Consideration A gratuitous benefit previously conferred upon a promisor. Not actually consideration Moral Cause Moral duty of the promisor to perform their promise. Relation Between Existing Legal Duty and Consideration If a contract already exists, a later promise to pay for the obligation already owed is not binding Problems arise here when construction companies try to abandon projects and offer to pay whoever hold their contract in return for this Third-parties will try to pay sum to promisor for preexisting obligations Post-midterm Material 1 Gratuitous Reduction of a Debt Consideration rules can be unrealistic in business transactions Creditor my find it beneficial to take lesser amount than to insist on payment in full Bankruptcy debtor may go bankrupt if they have to pay full amount, creditor may get less than what they would have accepted as a reduced sum by the time other creditors claims have been settled Debtor may be able to convince others to help pay the debt so they may make a fresh start Creditor may need at least part of the sum urgently, getting some of it back sooner is better than getting all of it back later Avoiding the rule in Foakes v. Beer: Early payment is viewed as consideration Rule only applies to transfers of money Can trade a trinket for canceling a debt Applies to creditor-debtor relationship A third party can offer to pay a lesser sum to cancel the debt In some provinces a creditor who accepts part performance and this is acknowledged as a full settlement of the debt, the entire debt is extinguished Creditor can cancel this before the sum has been paid Creditor can agree in writing and under seal to reduce the debt Equitable Estoppel Evolution of the Principle Someone makes an GRATUITOUS PROMISE to another, intending to keep it, later finds it inconvenient to perform Promise reasonably relied on the promise and incurs expenses that they wouldnt have otherwise If the PROMISOR DEFAULTS, they promise cannot be enforced, promise suffers burden: spme relief id possible if the estoppel concept is applied Estoppel Based on Fact Estopped Prevented One person asserts a statement of fact, another relies upon it to their detriment, maker of statement will be estopped from denying the truth of their original statement in a court of law, even of it turns out to be untrue The truth of an existing fact can be easily tested by the courts through hearing evidence, it is objective Can this apply to a promise of future conduct? Foakes v. Beer
Post-midterm Material 2 Courts not bale to ignore those who relied in good faith on a GP and the promisor changed their mind Courts estop the promissor from claiming they are not bound to their promise Equitable (Promissory) Estoppel The courts exercise of its equitable jurisdiction to estop a promisor from claiming that they were not bound by their GP where reliance on that promise caused injury to the promisee. Equitable estoppel limited to use by promisor as defense against claim where legal relationship already exists GPs can be withdrawn, but its withdrawal cannot prejudice the promise in respect to past reliance on it Equitable estoppel applies when: 1. Some form of a legal relationship already exists 2. One of the parties promises to release the other form some of the others legal duties to him 3. The other party, in reliance on the promise, alters their conduct in a way that would cause hardship if the promisor reneges on their promise. Injurious Reliance US courts allow the injured party to force the promisor to perform the promise The promisor induced the promisee to rely on their promise, so they must honour it to prevent injustice Injurious Reliance Loss or harm suffered by a promisee who, to their detriment, relied reasonably on a GP Is a cause of action, not just a defense Views the situation from the position of the promisee The Effect of a Request for Good or Services When a person requests goods or services from another, the law implies a promise to pay Applies between strangers and friends if it is rendered in a customary business transaction, not necessarily between close friends or family Quantum Meruit The amount a person deserves to be paid for goods or services provided to the person requesting them. Parties agree to a price they cannot refer matter to the courts The Use of a Seal Covenant A serious promise Hughes v. Metropolitan Railway Co.
Post-midterm Material 3 Covenantor One who makes a covenant. Document Under Seal A covenant recorded in a document containing a wax seal, showing that the convenantor adopted the document as their act and deed Seal must be affixed at the time that the document is signed Printing the word seal can present difficulties Supreme Court views this as anticipatory, not a suitable substitution for the real thing Promise made under seal does not require any further consideration Offer made under seal is irrevocable Intention to Create Legal Relations No contract unless both parties intended to create a legal relationship Agreement on all essential terms Mutual intention to create legally binding contract Law presumes intent is present in almost all instances Difficult to make inquiries about the state of mind when the agreement was made This presumption is especially strong with dealing between strangers and in commerce Rebutting the assumption of intent: Test of the reasonable bystander if to such a person the outward conduct of the parties lacked serious intention to make an agreement, no binding contract results Intention can be assessed based on what a reasonable person would believe Chapter 7 Formation of a Contract: Capacity to a Contract and Legality of Object The Role of Legality in the Formation of a Contract The object must be legal Public Policy Goals or principles benefiting society or good for the general public. Illegal Offends the public good (contrary to public policy) or violates a statute. Courts presume the transaction is legal unless defendant produces evidence otherwise Easy to tell if it violates a statute Not as easy to determine if it violates public policy Leonard v. Pepsi Co.
Post-midterm Material 4 Unenforceable No court assistance or remedy is available to the parties of a contract. Illegal contracts treated as unenforceable, unless statute states that it is void Differentiation Between a Void and Illegal Contract Void Contract does not exist in the eyes of the court, tries to return everyone to pre-contract positions Parties released from performance obligations Money and property may be returned Severed Removed from the contract. Court can find that only one part of the contract is void and the rest is valid Sever the void section and enforce the remainder of the contract if it is just Illegal Courts will no assist any party who knowingly entered into an illegal contract Less likely to sever the illegal part and enforce the rest of the contract Contracts Affected by Statute Significance of the Wording of a Statute Most contracts do not consider contracts that conflict with them, leave it to courts to figure out on public policy grounds May prevent particular type of contracts from having legal effect by sating that they are void Can go further to describe the agreements as illegal, unenforceable, etc. Can make agreements a criminal offence Can make legal what was previously considered against public policy Contracts Void by Statute Agreements Contrary to the Purpose of Legislation Workers Compensation Act: provides money to workers injured at work, contract undermining this is void Bankrupcy and Insolvency Act: purpose is to gather the assests of a bankrupt person to pay their creditors, thereafter to release them from further obligation to pay If a person transfers property as a gift or at an unreasonably low price and becomes bankrupt within one year, the transfer is void Insolvent person cannot transfer property to one of several creditors as a way to give them preference over the others Statutes Affecting Public Policy Gaming act of 1845: all bets are void and unenforceable Post-midterm Material 5 Wager An agreement between two parties in which each has some probability of winning or losing. Stakeholder A person or organization that manages a betting arrangement for a fee and redistributes winnings. Important to make the distinction between parties to a wager and a stakeholder Insurance Contracts Should the feared loss occur, one will receive a measure of compensation Insurable Interest An interest where a person has a financial benefit from the continued existence of the property or life insured or would suffer financial detriment from its loss or destruction Insurance acts state that the contract is invalid unless the party making the contract has an insurable interest in the property or life insured Stock Exchange Transactions An agreement that is a wager about the price of a specific security at a future date, without good faith intention of acquiring, selling, or taking delivery of the shares, the agreement is an offence and is illegal Does not apply to futures Agreements Illegal by Statute Statutes often dont deal directly with consequences for contracts, just for certain kinds of conduct, contracts that violate this conduct are illegal Tax evasion Smuggling Business that require a license must have one or they may not be able to sue to collect for services rendered Courts made decision to refuse to give relief only where it would be contrary to public policy to do so Agreements Made Legal by Statute Arbitration Agreements Contracts that requires all disputes to be resolved in arbitration, not the courts. Courts used to consider contracts that blocked access to the court system unenforceable
To avoid continuous legislation changes, most decisions about legality are left to the courts Post-midterm Material 6 Contracts Illegal by the Common Law an Public Policy Common Law Common law has identified types of conduct that are harmful to others and grants remedies to the person harmed by this conduct When a contract requires a commission of a tort, the contrac it illegal Torts that typically arise in an agreement: Slander and libel Trespass Fraud Inducement to break an existing contract Exceptions to this rule for insurance contracts Policies promise to pay even if they are negligent in driving or in course of professional practice A business can exempt themselves from liability for negligence by terms of a contract Public Policy Can be regarded as illegal even if it does not contemplate the commission of a crime or tort If a court decides that a contract is prejudicial to: The interests of Canada, Its relations with foreign countries, Its national defense, Its public service, The values of society as a whole, or The administration of justice within the country, The court will declare it illegal, even though performance is not a tort or crime Contract to compensate a person who puts up bail fro the accused is illegal Embezzlement Embezzlers, once caught, usually offer ot repay all the borrowed funds Victim of this must remember that this is a crime that demands conviction Agreement to withhold this information is an obstruction of justice
Agreements that promote unnecessary litigation obstruct the course of justice Symington v. Vancouver Breweries and Riefel
Post-midterm Material 7 Agreements in Restraint of Trade Agreements in Restraint of Trade AKA non-competition agreements or restrictive covenants when included in a larger contract Courts view competition as a necessary part of economic life Non-competition agreements may be unenforceable or can violate the Competition act, triggering regulatory or criminal sanctions Restrictive Covenant A term in restraint of trade A contract can contain a restrictive covenant that is found against public policy, court may strike out the offending term and enforce the rest of the contract Initially assume a term in restraint of trade is against public policy, a party seeking to enforce must show that it is a reasonable arrangement between the parties and that it does not adversely affect the public interest Agreements Between Vendor and Purchaser of a Business Purchaser can pay for a business goodwill only if the seller agrees to do nothing in the future to compromise the value of what they are selling: must promise not to enter into a business that is likely to compete with the one they are selling Law must enforce this promise of the purchaser will be deprived of a valuable part of the asset they have paid for This is in the mutual interest of the purchaser and vendor and may not offend the public interest Can be enforced if: The restriction place on the vendor are reasonable in the nature of the trade or practice sold Up to a court to decide if it offends the public interest The consider: Proximity to the business that is being sold Length of time that they cannot operate in a similar business
Courts rarely narrow these criteria to a reasonable scope If a clause is too wide the vendor will be free from the restraint Courts will sever unreasonable restrictions from the contract, which can leave some restrictions still in place Agreements Between Employee and Employer More difficult to show that conditions restricting trade between employee and employer are not in restraint of trade Nordenfelt v. Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co. Ltd.
Post-midterm Material 8 Bargaining power is unequal, not payment for goodwill Can make leaving an employer to accept another position in the vicinity almost impossible Courts want to protect mobility of labour Employer will ask for an injunction to restrain the former employee Restrictive covenant can be enforced if I can be shown to be: Unambiguous, Reasonable between the parties, and Not injurious to the public Likely to be binding if the employee had access to trade secrets or represented the employer in dealings with customers If a non-solicitation clause would have been sufficient, the ban on competition will be unenforceable Courts will not sever the unreasonable section and substitute the lesser requirement
Chapter 8 Grounds Upon Which a Contract May Be Set Aside: Mistake and Misrepresentation Setting Aside a Contract Courts tend to hold parties to bargains they make in the interest of commercial certainty Equitable principles sometimes allow a party can be released from their obligations Mistake Misrepresentation Undue influence Duress The Narrow Meaning of Mistake Parties enter into a contract and later regret it only some circumstances allow someone to be released because of a mistake Errors in judgment to not amount to a legal mistake Excusing performance too easily makes contracts unreliable Void The contract never comes into existence and no rights pass. Voidable The contract exists until set aside by a court; rights may pass to third parties before it is set aside. Equitable Relief A discretionary remedy to undo an injustice. Shafron v. KRG Western Post-midterm Material 9 Rescind Set aside; undo or revoke a contract and return the parties as nearly as possible to their original positions. Mistakes must usually be about factual circumstances, not the law Void and Voidable Contracts If a mistake has been made the contact can be: Void Voidable Or the mistake can be corrected (rarely) Void The contract was never formed at all It is ineffective form the beginning No rights, titles, or ownership pass to anyone
From figure above: Since the contract between A and B never existed, the contract between B and C also fails Voidable Contract exists until it is set aside by the court Prior to that, rights, title, or ownership pass as set out by the contract Contract may still be rescinded, courts of equity thought C having to return the goods to A may be too harsh in some circumstances
For C to have protection they must be a purchaser who is: 1. Innocent 2. Paid good value If C knows there was fraud, they can be sued for recovery by A
Void and voidable may not make much of a difference when only two parties are involved Whether it is void or voidable depends on the mistake A "Sells" goods to B B Says he will resell the goods to C C Can be sued by A for recovery of the goods A "Sells" goods to B B B obtains title Says he will resell the goods to C C Obtains title ot the goods Cannot be sued for recovery if they meet the proper criteria Post-midterm Material 10 Mistakes About the Terms Words Used Inadvertently One party inadvertently uses the wrong word in stating the terms of a contract Unilateral Mistake A situation in which only one of the parties believes there is a mistake in the contract. Consequences should usually fall on the on who made the error If it is clear to an objective observer that there was a mistake made in expressing the terms of the contract, it may be VOIDABLE Court considers whether the other party should have realized that a mistake was made Errors in Recording an Agreement Contract contains an error, but party does not with to be released from the obligation Wants to have corrected deal enforced Mutual Mistake A situation in which both parties believe a mistake exists in the contract but their understandings of the mistake are different. Mistake can be rectified If the parties are under a mutual mistake this is simple If one party has benefited from the mistake, may resist attempts to correct the document Can ask the court for rectification if the conditions are met: 1. Court is satisfied that there was a complete oral agreement between the parties, free from ambiguity and not conditional on further adjustments. 2. The parties did not engage in further negotiations to amend the contract. 3. The mistake in the contract may have, but does not have to have, occurred as a result of fraud. 4. When the written document was signed, knew or should have known of the mistake and did not. 5. Any subsequent attempt to enforce the inaccurate document would be equivalent to fraud. These are difficult to prove, courts are reluctant to alter the final document Error about the Meanings of Words Parties agree that what is written in the contract is correct, they may place different meaning on the words in the contract Webster v. Cecil Raffles v. Wichelhaus Post-midterm Material 11 Court will decide which meaning is more reasonable in the circumstances Whose ever interpretation is more reasonable, is the one that is binding If both are equally reasonable to unreasonable, and holding one party to the others interpretation would be unjust, the contract is void Mistakes About the Subject Matter Mistake about the Existence of the Subject Matter of a Contract If at the time that the contract is made, unknown to both parties, the subject matter dos not exist Common Mistake A situation in which both parties believe the same misunderstanding or mistake about the contract. In the case above, the contract was held to be void Sale of Goods Act: If the good without the knowledge of the seller have perished at the time the contract is made, the contract is void Mistake about the Value of the Subject Matter The subject matter still exists, its qualities are different that what the parties contemplated Courts grant relief depending on the reasonability of the parties expectations Parties may be expected to know that the price of the subject matter is volatile (commodities) If subject matter is understood, described, or represented as having qualities that create value and mistakes are made about these, relief may be available About quality or quantity Ceveat Emptor Let the buyer beware. Buyers expectd to use caveat emptor principal When there is a misrepresentation, discovery is impossible, or both parties believe the same mistaken characteristics, rescission may be available Voidable is purchaser move quickly Delayed action prevents rescission Mistake About the Identity of a Party to a Contract Unilateral mistake, often involving fraud Couturier v. Haste Hyrsky et al v. Smith
Post-midterm Material 12 Where an existing identity is assumed, the contract is void Courts want to limit the application of the above case, as the burden is borne by the blameless If a fake identity is used, the contract is voidable Third party is better protected when the initial transactions are face-to-face Mistakes About the Nature of a Signed Document Non Est Factum It is not my doing Medieval times, people were illiterate, relied on literate party to describe the document Literate party misreads the document void Careless signers cannot avoid liability pleading non est factum
Misrepresentation Contract Versus Tort Courts will set aside contracts if a misrepresentation has occurred If a person innocently makes a misstatement, no tort is committed Must inform the other party of the true situation as soon as possible Becomes fraudulent or negligent if the party fails to do this Material Could reasonably be expected to influence or induce the decision of a party to enter into a contract. Material misrepresentations give right to rescind the contract If the misrepresentation is fraudulent or negligent the court can award damages Misrepresentations are usually in the pre-contract bargaining, not included in offer When they are in the offer they are part of a term , they can gve rise to a breach of contract Cundy v. Lindsay
Kings Norton Metal Co. v. Edridge
Saunders v. Anglia Building Society Post-midterm Material 13 Standard Form Contracts Contracts prepared in advance by one party and presented on a take it or leave it basis, without an opportunity to negotiate the terms. Standard forms usually state that there are not representations other than the ones contained in the written terms Statements about goods and services in advertisements can be considered representations (less commonly terms) False assertions are misrepresentations only if they are a statement of fact Expert opinions are considered equivalent to a statement of fact Consequences of Misrepresentation in Contracts When a party who relied upon a material representation learns the truth, the contract is voidable at their option Have the renounce the agreement promptly May be compensated for out-of-pocket expenses while preforming the contract Indemnity or Compensation A money award given as a supplement to rescission for loss sustained in performing a contract. Misrepresentations by Silence or Omissions Some types con contracts give rise to disclosure obligations Fiduciary relationships disclosure of all pertinent information Utmost Good Faith A duty of disclosure owed when a special relationship of trust exists between the parties. Utmost good faith requirement almost always exists in continuing business relationships Failure to properly disclose in the following situations render the contract voidable. Contracts of Insurance Party seeking insurance must disclose all pertinent information to the insurance company relating to the risk the company is being asked to assume Insurers have to investigate applicants before agreeing to insure for public liability (car insurance and the like) Contracts Involving the Sale of Corporate Securities Prospectus A statement issues to inform the public about a new issue of shares or bonds. Inaccurate, missing, or misleading prospectus will attract rescission and the right to claim damages from anyone involved with the document Contracts Involving the Sale of Goods Sale of Goods Act restrics the caveat emptor principle for the sale of goods Consumers can rescind contract if vendor fails to disclose problems with ownership Does not apply to contracts for services or land Post-midterm Material 14 For land: No obligations to disclose defects, complaints about misrepresentation have to be raised before title is transferred Contracts With Consumers Suppliers are supposed to point out terms in standard form contracts that the consumer would not reasonably expect Failure to disclose may give the consumer the right to rescind Cooling-off Period A time during which a consumer may cancel a contract without any reason. Length of time is set by provincial legislation. Undue Influence the domination of one party over the min of another to such a degree as to deprive the weaker party of the will to make an independent decision. Contract formed as a result of undue influence is voidable at the option of the victim Can only avoid the contract if they act promptly after they are freed from the domination Often an issue in wills Often arise when the parties have special relationship to each other Doctor and patient Lawyer and client Parent and child Religious leader and believer Burden of Proof Party claiming undue influence must show the court that domination was probable Easier to do when a special relationship exists Burden then falls on the other party to show that undue influence was not exerted Arrangements Involving Spouses Spouse can set a transaction aside if they can prove actual undue influence Some marital relationships will raise the presumption of undue influence The Importance of Independent Legal Advice Independent legal advice received by the weaker party prior to signing rebuts any undue influence presumptions Needs to come from a lawyer not associated with the transaction or other parties Lenders that are aware of a special relationship between co-debtors have to ask about possibility of undue influence Consumer Protection Courts recognize the unequal bargaining positions in business to customer transactions Unconscionable Contracts Contracts where there is unequal bargaining power between the parties and the powerful party get an extremely advantageous deal. Post-midterm Material 15 Unconscionable contracts are voidable Some provinces have legislation that defines deceptive business practices that will make contracts voidable Loan transactions require disclosure of cost of borrowing, maximum interest rates, terms of credit, etc. Duress Actual or threatened violence or imprisonment as a means of coercing a party to enter into a contract. These contracts are voidable at the option of the victim Have to act promptly to make it so The threat does not need to be directed to the individual, does not have to be explicitly stated Coercion Improperly forced payment under protest. Economic duress is an area where undue influence and duress overlap. Entirety Clause A term in a contract stating that the whole agreement is contained in the written documents and there are no other terms, conditions, representations, or warranties. Chapter 9 The Requirement of Writing The Distinction Between Substance and Form The Benefits of a Written Record Substance may have many physical forms or none at all Categories of form: i. Contracts whose terms are entirely oral ii. Contracts whose terms are part oral and part written iii. Contracts whose terms are entirely in writing, whether all in one document or spread through several documents Good business practice to keep at least some record of transactions Memories fail If the contract is oral the court has to try to determine what the parties agreed to in the first place Legislation Dealing With Writing At common law, oral contracts are just as enforceable as thos written down Over time legislators identified high risk contracts and required that they be in writing Writing requirements imposed by three types of legislation: 1. The Statute of Frauds 2. The Sale of Goods Act 3. Consumer Protection Act Post-midterm Material 16 The Statute of Frauds Passed in 1677 Makes certain types of contracts unenforceable if they are not in writing Try to limit the applications because it allows perfectly valid oral contracts to be avoided Types of Contracts Affected by the Statute of Frauds 1. A Promise to Answer for the Debt, Default, or Miscarriage of Another Guarantee and Indemnity Courts have narrowed this definition Courts distinguish between: Guarantee A conditional promise to pay only if the debtor defaults. Indemnity A promise by a third party to be primarily liable to pay the debt. Courts have applied this part of the statute only to guarantees Promises to indemnify are enforceable if they are not in writing Has excluded guarantees that are only one of many more important rights and duties created by the contract Miscarriage An injury caused by the tort of another person. Courts have limited the miscarriage clause to mean that they will pay damages for loss caused by the tort of another person 2. An Agreement Made in the Consideration of Marriage Applies to arrangements about assets brought into a marriage as common property Been replaced by family law reform Do not necessarily require that marriage and cohabitation arrangements be in writing 3. A Contract Concerning an Interest in Land Concerned with the indestructability and permanence qualities land have Systems of public records that show who owns land Have to distinguish between contracts where the Statute applies and where the interest is too remote Part Performance Performance begun by a in reliance on an oral contract relating to an interest in land, and accepted by the court as evidence of the contract in place of a written memorandum. Courts of equity developed this principle, still applied in modern courts The following must be satisfied before the courts will enforce the contract: i. The contract must be one concerning land Post-midterm Material 17 ii. The acts of performance must suggest clearly the existence of a contract; they must not be ambiguous or possibly explained as part of a different transaction. iii. must perform the acts and must suffer a loss by performance if the contract is not enforced. If the court accepts the acts as sufficient evidence, the court will enforce the contract according to the terms orally agreed 4. An Agreement Not to Be Performed by Either Party Within One Year Memories fail over time, Parliament chose an arbitrary limit Does not apply to a contract that may last longer than a year, unless the terms specified a time for performance that was clearly longer than a year Allows exclusion of contracts for an indefinite period Does not apply where one party will need more than one year to perform if the other will wholly perform in one year 5. Ratification of Infants Contracts Does not apply to contracts that are valid unless rejected Requirements for a Written Memorandum Statute requires a note or memorandum of the contract signed by the party to be charged or by an authorized agent All Essential Terms Must Be Included Identities of the parties Subject matter Consideration Exception for guarantees: consideration does not need to appear in writing Does not have to be in one document, easier if they reference each other Signed by the Defendant signature is irrelevant Lenient on what amounts to a signature, does not need to be in handwriting Consequences for Contracts Within Its Scope A contract made unenforceable by the Statue still exists even though no one can get a remedy Contract is not void so it can still affect a legal relationship between the parties 1. Recovery of Money Paid Under a Contract Party who breaches an unenforceable contract will not gain any further advantage 2. Recover for Goods and Services Quantum meruit still applies, someone cannot accept goods and services and retain benefit without paying something for them Post-midterm Material 18 3. Effect of a Subsequent Written Memorandum As long as it comes into existence before action is brought on the contract, it provides the necessary evidence 4. Defendant Must Expressly Plea the Statute Court will decide the case without reference to the Statute if they do not 5. Effect on a Prior Written Contract The oral contract can vary or dissolve an existing written contract even though it is not enforced Chapter 10 The Interpretation of Contracts The Relationship Between Formation and Interpretation of Contracts Construing Interpreting Important to prevent ambiguity when drafting the terms of a contract Court applies the most reasonable meaning given the circumstances The Interpretation of Express Terms Two Approaches to Interpretation Strict or Plain-Meaning Approach An approach that restricts the interpretation to the ordinary or dictionary meaning of a word. Few words have a plain meaning or have only one dictionary definition Words change meaning over time and have different meaning in different circumstances Liberal Approach An approach that looks to intent of the parties and surrounding circumstances, and tends to minimize, but dies not ignore, the importance of the words actually used. An invite endless speculation Conduct must serve as the primary guide to ones intentions How the Courts Apply the Approaches Usually applies both and chooses the best meaning for the circumstances Will look outside the contract to past contracts between the parties or intentions that were made clear before the contract was made How the Courts Choose Between Conflicting Testimony Court seeks corroboration of their versions, from a non-party of from the parties actions in relation to the contract Last resort, choose based on the credibility of the sources themselves Which version seems more reasonable Post-midterm Material 19 Special Usage of Words Court begins with the dictionary definitions of the words then examines meaning in context Special usage of words in trade or in areas of the country can come into consideration This evidence is not always conclusive court can decide that the it was not used in a special way or that they knew the other party was not aware of the trade usage for the word Court construes words most strictly against the party who suggested them Special Types of Contracts Contra Proferentem A rule of contract interpretation that prefers the interpretation of a clause that is least favourable to the party that drafted the clause. Used in standard form contracts to deal with the one-sided nature of the contract Also applied to exemption clauses Exemption Clause A clause in a contract that exempts any part from liability. Interpretation of insurance contracts must: i. Follow the contra proferentem rule, ii. Construe coverage terms broadly, and iii. Interpret exclusion clauses narrowly. Predicting the Likely Decision in Court Courts take position of the informed, objective bystander Closest substitution may be a lawyer The Goal of the Courts: To Give Validity to Contracts Often easier for the court to declare agreement void because of ambiguity They want to see the agreement stay alive so that parties take contracts seriously The Parole Evidence Rule The Meaning of the Rule Party to a contract may realize after signing that a term they believed was part of the agreement has been omitted (purposely or otherwise) Parol Evidence Rule A rule preventing a party to a written contract from later using parole evidence to add to, subtract from, or modify the final written contract. Does not prevent parole evidence from being used to address the formation of the contract The Consequences of the Rule Sometimes parties choose to omit terms on the final form o the contract Courts are reluctant to relax the rule for these situation Post-midterm Material 20 People would start claiming that there were terms agreed upon that were only part of negotiations The Scope of the Rule Does the document contain the whole contract? Sometimes courts find that the document was not intended to embody the whole agreement Interpretation of the Contract Does not affect interpretation of express terms in the contract Does accept parole evidence in explaining the meaning of words used in the contract Subsequent Oral Agreement Parole evidence does not exclude evidence that there was an oral agreement between the parties after they entered into the written one The new oral agreement can alter the prior written one Collateral Agreement A separate agreement between the parties made at the same time as, but not included in, the written document. Courts are reluctant to enforce theses unless there is separate consideration can be found and it does not contradict the written agreement Condition Precedent Any set of circumstances or events that the parties stipulate must be satisfies or must happen before their contract takes effect. If a party can provide evidence that a condition precedent was agreed upon and not met a court will recognize it Implied Terms as a Method of Interpretation Comparison With Interpretation of Express Terms When there is an unforeseen disagreement, one approach is to resolve to by determining the most reasonable interpretation of the terms Implied Term A term not expressly included by the parties in their agreement but which, as reasonable people, they would have included had they thought about it. Can see if the intention of the parties can only be achieved by admitting an implied term Only if it is obviously necessary for them to accomplish the purpose of the contract Terms Established by Custom or Statute Implied terms often arise from long-standing customs in a trade or type of transaction These types of terms have been codified in a statute that sets out all the previously established implied terms in one place Post-midterm Material 21 Reasonable Expectations of the Parties Court will not make a new contract for the parties, Will only go so far as to imply terms that are reasonably necessary Will not find an implied terms that deals with the same matter in a different way Will not imply a term that is contrary to the intent of the contract Chapter 11 Privity of a Contract and the Assignment of Contractual Rights Privity of Contract The Limited Scope of Contractual Rights and Duties Logical that only the parties that agreed to a contract have rights and duties created between them, a person outside should not have rights or duties under it Third Party A person who is not one of the parties to a contract but is affected by it. Some contracts do affect third parties Privity of Contract The relationship that exists between parties to a contract. To win a contract law case you have to prove privity of contract with the other person A third party has not given consideration for the promise Can be too harsh when the object of the contract was to benefit the third party Comparison With Rights and Duties in Tort Liabilities of Sellers of Goods Only the buyer can sue for breach of contract with a seller of goods of they are not suitable for the intended use Liability of Manufacturers Can be sued under tort for negligence, all end-users may do this Applying the Privity of Contract Rule to Performance Vicarious Performance A third party performs contractual obligations on behalf of the promisor who remains responsible for proper performance. How it Occurs Business takes on more than it can complete or it does not have the necessary skills Still liable for performance, it is not transferred to the third party Tweedle v. Atkinson Post-midterm Material 22 When is Vicarious Performance Allowed? As long as the contract does not specify personal performance It would not be accepted if personal performance is expected Can only sue for damages that arose due to the vicarious performance as opposed to personal Tort Liability and Vicarious Performance Employer is liable for defects in vicarious performance by employees in tort and contract Exemption Clauses and Vicarious Performance Exemption Clause A clause in a contract that exempts or limits the liability of a party. Protects a business from liability for its own breach of contract, negligence and vicarious liility for the torts of its employees Other Exceptions to the Privity of Contract Rule Insurance Life insurance pays out to a person who is not a party to the contract These third parties have a right to have the insurance company pay out the contract Car insurance can cover the owner and anyone who drive their car with consent The Undisclosed Principle A contracting party who, unknowing to the other party, is represented by an agent. When someone can prove that they are an agent of someone else, that someone can sue or be sued on the contract Contracts Concerning Land Privity of contract rules do not apply in land laws People who acquire land are bound by earlier contracts on public record The Principled Exemption Exemption Clauses A third party can rely on exemption clauses if: 1. Did the parties to the contract intend to extend the protection to the third party claiming it? 2. Are the activities of the third party within the scope of the contract generally, and the exemption clause in particular? Principled Exemption Allows third parties to rely upon a contractual exemption clause when the parties to the contract intended to include them, and their activities come within the scope of the contract and the exemption clause. Third party cannot sue under this principle, only uses it as a defense Post-midterm Material 23 Chapter 12 The Discharge of Contracts Discharge of a Contract Cancel or end the obligations of a contract; make and agreement or contract inoperate. Discharge By Performance The Nature of Discharge by Performance The way parties expect a contract to come to an end Both parties have fulfilled their promises Tender of Performance An attempt by one party to perform according to the terms of the contract. A party may refuse to accept the tender of performance of the other party Discharge By Agreement Waiver An agreement no to proceed with the performance of an existing contract. If neither has performed, there s automatically consideration for this agreement If someone has performed or partially performed, there is not consideration for both of the parties, to waive in this situation it should be under seal One party cannot impose a waiver on the other Substituted Agreement Accord and Satisfaction A compromise between contracting parties to substitute a new contractual obligation and release a party from the existing one. If performance is too difficult a party to a contract can offer the other a substitution for performance if they are discharged from the original obligation Material alteration is different because they are concerned with creating a new arrangement, discharge of the old one is incidental Novation The parties to a contract agree to terminate it and substitute a new contract. Two types: 1. A material change in terms 2. A change in parties Has to be evidence of intention and agreement to abandon the original contract Burden of proof is on the party claiming that the obligation switched to the new party to the contract S agrees to sell $10000 worth of flour to B, cash on delivery. S wants out of the contract. If B tenders the money to S in the presence of a witness and S does not deliver, B can sue S for breach of contract. S cannot claim that B was unable to pay. Post-midterm Material 24 A Contract for Its Own Dissolution Party might be worries about future event that could affect their ability to perform Will often include a term that stipulates what will happen if this event occurs Both parties are obliged to wait to see of the condition precedent ids fulfilled before they can ignore their obligations to perform Condition Subsequent A future event that brings a promisors liability to an end if it happens. Act of God The raging of the natural elements. An act of god may be a condition subsequent in contracts for shipment of goods Option to Terminate Contract can give option to being a contract to an end before performance has been completed Differs from condition precedent and subsequent in that the party decides to trigger the discharge of the contract Discharge By Frustration Cannot address all possible future events in terms in a contract Doctrine of Frustration Courts cannot dismiss performance in all cases Doctrine of Frustration The law excuses a party from performance when circumstances beyond the control of the parties make performance impossible, pointless, or radically different from that intended by the parties. The change in performance has to happen after the agreement was made Self-Induced Frustration Party willfully disables itself from performing a contract in order to claim that the contract has been frustrated. Party whose frustration is self-induced cannot rely on the doctrine of frustration Not all degrees of fault will prevent a party from claiming that the contract is frustrated The Effect of Frustration The contract is discharged at the moment of the frustrating event Partial performance creates losses for innocent parties Let the loss fall where it lies The court will enforce the contract up to the moment of discharge. Obligations due before the frustrating event remain, obligations arising after the frustrating event are discharged. This make sense on the purchasing end, not so good for seller If the seller delivers some part of the final product before the frustrating event they will be able to keep deposits Post-midterm Material 25 Statutory Reform To fix the unfairness that arises out of the above approach, most provinces have passed the Frustrated Contracts Act Allocates the losses between the parties Recovery or retention is capped at the amount paid or due If a party has made no deposit and had not received any benefit then the other party is without remedy The Sale of Goods When there is an agreement to sell goods and they perish before the risk has been passed to the buyer the agreement is void under the following conditions: 1. The goods must be specific must be identified and agreed upon at the time of sale 2. The risk must still be with the seller 3. The cause of frustration must be the perishing or destruction of the goods Discharge By Operation of Law Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act discharges debtor from contractual liabilities after the process has been completed Statute Barred An action that may no longer be brought before a court because the party wishing to sue has delayed beyond the limitation period in the statute. Chapter 13 Breach of Contract and Its Remedies Implications of Breach A breach entitles the non-breaching party to seek damages Does not discharge the contract automatically If it warrants discharge the other party has to inform the breaching party Loses ability to treat it as discharged when they proceed with the contract and accepts benefits, or the innocent party is not aware of the breach until after the other partys performance is already complete Can still claim damages Minor Breach A breach of a non-essential term of a contract or of an essential term in a minor respect. Major Breach A breach of the whole contract or of an essential term so that the purpose of the contract is defeated. Condition An essential term in a contract. Warranty A non-essential term of a contract. Post-midterm Material 26 How a Breach May Occur 1. Expressly repudiating its obligations 2. Acting in a way that makes it impossible to perform its promises 3. Failing to perform at all or tendering an actual performance that falls short of its promise Express Repudiation One of the contracting parties advises the other that it does not intend to perform as promised. If it is of the whole contract or an essential term, the promisee can treat it at an end and sue for damages Has to inform the other party that they are treating the contract at an end before finding a new party to perform Anticipatory Breach An express repudiation that occurs before the time agrees for performance. One Party Renders Performance Impossible A deliberate or negligent act that makes performance impossible is repudiation Conduct of this type can take place before or during performance Failure of Performance Types of Failure Usually apparent at the time set for performance Total failure to perform, inadequate performance, minor failure Degree of failure determines the remedy Innocent party may not know whether the failure is severe enough to allow them to treat the contract as discharged. Can if they can answer yes to the following: 1. Is there good reason to think that future performances will be equally defective 2. Is wither the expected deficiency or the actual deficiency to date important relative to the whole performance promised The Doctrine of Substantial Performance Substantial Performance Performance that does not comply in some minor way with the requirements of the contract. Promisor is entitles to enforce a contract when they have substantially performed Subject to reduction for damages for incomplete performance Mistakes in Performance What if someone over-performs? The recipient of the performance is not able to take benefit that belongs to another person, court will tell them to return it Quasi-Contract An obligation that may arise, not as a result of contractual relations, but because one party has received an unfair benefit at the expense of the other. Post-midterm Material 27 Unjust Enrichment An unfair benefit. Of the court finds that it is an unfair enrichment, they will be obliged to repay it Exemption Clauses Purpose Businesses need to protect themselves from liability for breach of contract Allocate risk so parties know who should insure against what Supplier can charge lower prices Business will be able to recover litigation costs if it offers a complete defense Work well when bargaining power is equal Attitude of the Courts Court will refuse to apply an exemption clause when: 1. The clause does not apply to the circumstances Interpret in manner consistent with the other terms in the contract Ambiguity interpreted against the drawing party Burden of proof is on the drawing party to shoe that the loss is covered by the clause When intention is shown, court will not defeat bargain freely made 2. The clause was unconscionable at the time of contracting 3. There is a strong public policy reason against enforcement Injured party has to point to some paramount consideration of public policy Types of Remedies Damages A monetary award to compensate an injured party for the loss caused by the other partys breach. Equitable Remedies Special non-monetary remedies given only when damages alone will not adequately compensate for a loss. Quantum Meriut A fair amount a person deserves to be paid for the benefit conferred. Damages The Purpose of an Award of Damages Compensate for loss caused by failure to perform Deters parties from committing breaches they can avoid Prerequisites for an Award of Damages 1. Loss must floe from the breach 2. Mitigation of Damages Post-midterm Material 28 Measurement of Damages Parties sometimes have the value of possible damages in a term of the contract Usually courts have to value the loss Liquidated Damages An amount agreed on to be paid in damages by a party to a contract f it should commit a breach. Penalty Clause A term specifying an exorbitant amount for breach of contract, indeed to frighten a party into performance. If the court thinks it was intended to scare the party into performance then they will assess the damages on their own Nominal Damages May award nominal damages to acknowledge breach of contract where there is not a real lo by the non-breaching party Acknowledges the validity of the plaintiffs argument Types of Damages Expectation Damages The typical remedy for a breach of contract Expected gross benefit injured partys costs of performance Expectation Damages Amount awarded for a breach of contract, based on expected benefits or profits. Consequential Damages Secondary losses incurred by the non-breaching party that were foreseeable at the time of contracting. Secondary losses, one stage removed from the immediate effects of the breach Since they are reasonably foreseeable the defendant is liable to compensate for them General Damages Non-monetary harm arising from the breach. Damage cannot be calculated in precise monetary terms Court believes that award is necessary to compensate the aggrieved party Reliance Damages Costs of expenditures and wasted effort reasonably made in preparation for performance. Punitive Damages For malicious and bad faith behavior of breaching party Rarely used Post-midterm Material 29 Challenges in Measuring Damages Mental Anguish Mental distress resulting from a breach of contract is recognized as a non-economic harm entitled to compensation Examples: Wrongful dismissal Lost holidays Cost of Performance Versus Economic Loss Want to end up where the non-breaching party is no worse off as a result of the failure to perform Cost of performance for the breaching party may not be comparable to the economic loss suffered by the non-breaching party Equitable Remedies Money damages may be inadequate Prerequisites for an Equitable Remedy Court has to be satisfies that damages will not suffice Requirements: i. must have clean hands ii. must not delay in bringing action iii. It will not negatively effect an innocent purchaser iv. must have paid substantial consideration for the promise v. must ordinarily be a party against whom the remedy would be awarded of they were instead Specific Performance An order requiring to do a contracted-for act, usually to complete a transaction. Court will not do this if they might be obliged to supervise For sale of one-of-a-kind merch, shares, antiques, etc. Injunction A court order restraining a party from acting in a particular manner, such as committing a breach of contract. Contract must contain a promise not to do something Interlocutory Injunction A temporary injunction preventing immediate harm from being done before the full trial of the matter. Common in land transactions Post-midterm Material 30 Rescission Setting aside to rescinding a contract in order to restore the parties as nearly as possible to their pre-contract positions. Not a usual remedy for breach of contract If breach is serious enough to release a party from their obligations, they may elect to have the contract rescinded Quantum Meruit When valuable benefit is conferred as a result of a promise When a non-breaching party has partially performed their obligations Methods for Enforcing Judgments Judgment Creditor A party who has obtained a court judgment for a sum of money. Judgment Debtor A party who has been ordered by the court to pay a sum of money. Levy Execution To seize and sell a debtors chattels or arrange for a sale of their land. Garnishee Order An order requiring the debtors employer to retain a portion of the debtors wages each payday and surrender the sum to the creditor. Honest inability to pay is not punished
Tax Practitioners' Perceptions Regarding Fraudulent Earned Income Tax Credit Claims: A Descriptive Case Study to Investigate the Phenomenon of Tax Practitioner Filing Fraudulent Tax Claims