Offer and Acceptance
Offer and Acceptance
Offer and Acceptance
If the parties have not agreed upon the terms of the
contract, but have made an agreement to agree in
future, there is no contract.
An agreement to be finally settled must comprise all the
terms which the parties intend to introduce in to the
agreement.
E.g., An actress was engaged in a theatrical company for a
certain period .One of the terms of the agreement was
that if the play was shown in London, she would be
engaged at a salary to be mutually agreed upon. Held ,
there was no contract.
Acceptance
Acceptance means giving consent to the offer.
It is an expression by the offeree of his
willingness to be bound by the terms of the
offer.
According to sec 2(b) of the Indian Contract
Act,1872,” A proposal is said to have accepted
when the person to whom the proposal is made
signifies his assent thereto. A proposal when
accepted becomes a promise”.
Acceptance
• An acceptance may be express or implied.
• It is express when it is communicated by
words, spoken or written or by doing some
required act.
• It is implied when it is to be gathered from the
surrounding circumstances of the cases or the
conduct of the parties.
Acceptance
Who can accept offer ?
Acceptance of a particular offer: Specific Offer
When an offer is made to a particular person, it can only
be accepted by him alone. If it is accepted by any other
person, there is no valid acceptance.
The rule of law is clear that if you propose to make a
contract with ‘A’, ‘B’ cannot substitute himself for
without your consent.
Acceptance of a general offer
• 1. By communication of notice of
revocation by the offeror at any time
before its acceptance is complete as
against him
Ex: At an auction sale, A makes the
highest bid for B’s goods. He withdraws
the bid before the fall of the hammer. The
offer has been revoked before its
acceptance.
Continued………..
2. By lapse of time:
If it is not accepted within the prescribed
time, then it ends in revocation of offer.
If no time is prescribed, it lapses by the expiry
of a reasonable time.
Ex: On June 8 M offered to take shares in R
company. He received a letter of acceptance on
November 23. He refused to take the shares.
Held, M was entitled to refuse as his offer had
lapsed as the reasonable period during which it
could be accepted had elapsed (Ramsgate
Victoria Hotel Co. v. Montefiore)
Continued…….
• 3. By non-fulfilment by the offeree of a
condition precedent to acceptance:
Ex: S, a seller, agrees to sell certain goods
subject to the condition that B, the buyer,
pays the agreed price before a certain
date. If B fails to pay the price by that
date, the offer stands revoked.
Continued……….
• 4. By death or insanity of the offeror
provided the offeree comes to know of it
before acceptance.
• 5. If a counter-offer is made to it:
• 6. If an offer is not accepted according to
the prescribed or usual mode:
CONSIDERATION
• Consideration is one of the essential elements to
support a contract. Subject to certain exceptions, an
agreement made without consideration is “nudum
pactum” (a nude contract) and is void.
• Justice Patterson defines consideration in the following
words: “Consideration means something which is of
some value in the eye of law…It may be some benefit
to the plaintiff or some detriment to the defendant.”
[Thomas vs. Thomas(1842)].There are two leading cases
which explain this point.
Abdul Aziz vs. Masum Ali (1914)
4.Completed Gift:
The rule “ No consideration, no contract” does not
apply to completed gifts..
e.g., X transferred some property to Y by a duly
written and registered deed as a gift. This is a
valid contract even though no consideration.
5.Agency [Sec.185]
No consideration is necessary to
create an agency.
A contract without consideration is void
-Exceptions
6.Charitable Subscription:
Where the promisee on the strength of
the promise makes commitments, i.e.,
changes his position to his detriment
[Refer. Kedarnath Vs. Gauri Mohammad].
STRANGER TO CONTRACT
3.Acknowledgement or estoppel:
Where the promisor by his conduct, acknowledges or
otherwise constitutes himself as an agent of a third
party, a binding obligation is thereby incurred by him
towards the third party.
Example: „A‟ receives some money from „T‟ to
be paid over to „P‟. A admits of this receipt to
„P‟. „P‟ can recover the amount from „A‟ who
shall be regarded as the agent of „P‟.
Exceptions to the rule “stranger to a contract cannot sue.”