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Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality

Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

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Page 1: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Business Law

Chapter 6:

Capacity and Legality

Page 2: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Introduction

• Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable.

Page 3: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Why is capacity important?

• If a plaintiff seeks to enforce a contract, he must prove that the defendant had legal capacity to enter into a contract.

Page 4: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Defining Capacity

• Capacity: Ability to do something, such as the mental ability to make a rational decision.

Page 5: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

• Capacity is an essential element of a contract because it shows that a party understood the contractual obligation.

Page 6: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

• Capacity refers to a party’s ability to understand what is happening, the effect of what agreeing to a contract means and the ability to exercise free will in making this choice.

Page 7: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

• Capacity is not the same thing as wise choice.

• A person can exercise poor judgment, enter into a contract that is disadvantageous, or even make a bad bargain, and still have full, legal capacity to contract.

Page 8: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

A Short History of Capacity

• Prior to a more enlightened approach to law in general and contractual obligations in particular, certain classes of people were absolutely barred from entering into contracts.

Page 9: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Who May Contract?

• Contracts need at least two parties, both of whom have legal capacity.

Page 10: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Natural Persons

• Any person who is not disqualified for some reason can enter into a contract, provided that he or she has legal capacity.

Page 11: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Artificial Persons

• Corporations, and some other forms of business entities, are considered to be artificial persons.

• They can bargain, negotiate and enter into contracts.

• Artificial persons have capacity.

Page 12: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Legal Competency

• To say that a person is legally competent is to say that he has the ability to know, understand and voluntarily engage in actions that can affect his interests.

Page 13: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Age or Infirmity

• The rules of capacity center on a person’s age, physical or mental infirmity.

Page 14: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Infancy

• When a person falls below a certain age level, the law presumes that he or she lacks capacity to contract.

Page 15: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Advanced Age

• No state, for instance, has a rule stating that a person above a specific age is presumed to be legally incompetent to enter into a contract.

• A person’s age is one of the factors that a court may take into account when it assesses a person’s capacity.

Page 16: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Physical Infirmity

• A disabled person who has the mental capacity to contract may do so, regardless of the disability.

• A person may be in such severe pain, or under the influence of drugs, that his capacity will be affected.

Page 17: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Guardianship

• When a person has been declared mentally incompetent, it is common for a court to appoint a guardian to represent that person.

Page 18: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Partial versus Total Incapacity

• When a person suffers from partial incapacity, he or she may still undertake a contractual obligation

Page 19: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Mental Incompetence or Mental Illness

• When a person is of lower than average intelligence, or suffers from some form of mental illness less than legal insanity, this person is still entitled to enter into a contract.

Page 20: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

The Other Party’s Good Faith

• A party’s good faith does not circumvent the rules surrounding capacity.

Page 21: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Intoxication

• Intoxication resembles a form of insanity.

Page 22: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Authority

• When we say the person has authority to enter into a contract it simply means that he or she has legal capacity and has no legal impediment to becoming a party to a contract.

Page 23: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Apparent authority

• If it appears that a person has the authority to make certain commitments in a contract, or to act for another, and the principal does not negate this perception, then the person has authority, even though it was never officially conferred upon him.

Page 24: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Actual authority

• When a person has actual authority it is usually vested in him through some overt action by another.

Page 25: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Third party contracts

• Third party contracts stem not from their involvement in the contract but from the fact that they derive some benefit from the contract between the other parties.

Page 26: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Creditor

• Creditor beneficiaries are created when a contract’s provisions include a promise to satisfy an outstanding debt.

Page 27: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Beneficiary

• Anyone who benefits from something or who is treated as the real owner of something for tax or other purposes.

Page 28: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Donee

• In most jurisdictions, a donee- beneficiary is created by contract provisions that show a clear intention by the parties to make a gift to a third party.

Page 29: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Assignee

• An assignee-beneficiary is a person or entity who will eventually be granted a specific right under the contract, such as a person who will eventually become a party to the contract.

Page 30: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Legal subject of contract

• A contract is void when the subject of the contract is illegal, such as a contract to engage in illegal activity or for an illegal purpose.

Page 31: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Contracts that are illegal because of subject

• Contracts that involve illegal actions are void for a very simple reason.

Page 32: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

• If this were not so, then a party seeking to enforce the contract could bring an action through the court system and request that a judge rule on the contract.

Page 33: Business Law Chapter 6: Capacity and Legality. Introduction Contracts must have a legal subject in order to be enforceable

Contracts that are unenforceable because of

public policy• The general rule followed in all

jurisdictions is that any contract that violates public policy is void and unenforceable.