Law of Contract: Agreement Session 2 © NU 2019
Law of Contract: Agreement Session 2 © NU 2019
Law of Contract: Agreement Session 2 © NU 2019
Agreement
Session 2
© NU 2019
Objectives
Explain the importance of ‘Offer’ and ‘Acceptance’ in any
contractual obligation
“If, whatever a man’s real intention may be, he so conducts himself that a
reasonable man would believe that he was assenting to the terms proposed by
the other party, and that other party upon that belief enters into the contract
with him, the man thus conducting himself would be equally bound as if he had
intended to agree to the other party’s terms”…per Blackburn J.
Storer v. Manchester City Council [1974] 3 ALL ER
824
“In contracts you do not look into the actual intent in a man’s mind. You look at
what he said and did. A contract is formed when there is, to all outward
appearances, a contract”…per Lord Denning.
Facts
The defendant City Council refused to proceed with the sale of a council property to
the claimant under an arrangement which had been agreed with its predecessor. All
of the terms of the contract had been agreed but for the date on which the lease was
to end and the mortgage payments were to begin, which had been left blank on the
form returned to the defendant by the claimant. The claimant alleged that the
contract was completely concluded and sought specific performance of the
agreement.
Storer v. Manchester City Council [1974] 3 ALL ER
824
Issue
The question was whether the contract had been concluded, despite the fact
that the date on which the claimant became a purchaser rather than a tenant
was still to be determined.
Held
The Court of Appeal held that the contract was complete despite the absence
◦ the terms of the offer must be definite, clear and certain. Where the
terms of the offer are obscure, uncertain or meaningless the
contract will fail.
CHARACTERISTICS OF A VALID OFFER CONT.
◦ Thus, in Loftus v. Roberts (1902) 18 TLR 532, an
agreement provided for the appointment of an actress by
another person at a “West End salary to be mutually
agreed between us.” Subsequently the parties were unable
to arrive at a salary which satisfied them both. The Court
held that the contract must fail.
(ii) Display of Goods: The display of goods with a price ticket attached in a
shop window or on a supermarket shelf is not an offer to sell but an invitation
for customers to make an offer to buy. See: Fisher v Bell [1960] 3 All ER 73
Pharmaceutical Society of GB v. Boots Cash Chemists (Southern) Ltd [1953] 1
Q.B. 401;
PRACTICAL EXAMPLES – Invitation to Treat
Only the person or persons to whom the offer is made can accept it.
COUNTER OFFERS
If in his reply to an offer, the offeree introduces a new term or varies the
terms of the offer, then that reply cannot amount to an acceptance.
Instead, the reply is treated as a ‘counter offer’, which the original offeror
is free to accept or reject. A counter-offer also amounts to a rejection of
the original offer which cannot then be subsequently accepted.
Rule of Acceptance
A counter-offer puts an end to the original offer and it cannot be
revived by subsequent acceptance. Hyde v. Wrench (1840) 3 Beav
334.
The offeror cannot impose a contract on the offeree against his wishes by
deeming that his silence should amount to an acceptance. See: Felthouse v
Bindley (1862) 11 CBNS 869. Until the acceptance is communicated it does not
create any legal relations.
Brogden v. Metropolitan Railway Co. (1877) 2 App
Cas 666:
A draft agreement relating to the supply a coal was sent to the
manager of a Railway Company for his acceptance. The
manager wrote the word “approved” and put the draft in the
drawer of his table intending to send it to the Company’s
solicitor for a formal contract to be drawn up. By some
oversight the document remained in the drawer.
implied acceptance.
Rule of Acceptance
(6) Acceptance must be by the Offeree
An offer can be accepted only by the person(s) to whom it is
made.
It was held that he was not bound to accept the shares as the
allotment of shares was not within a reasonable time.
Conditional Acceptance
If the offeree puts a condition in the acceptance, then it will
not be binding.
This ranges from the human voice when parties are face to
face or on the telephone, to telex, fax machines, the internet
and e-mails.
The Postal Rule Exception
This general rule traces its origin from the case of Adams v.
Lindsell (1818) 1 B & Ald 681.