Contract Law Mock Examination: Date: Time Allowed: One Hour
Contract Law Mock Examination: Date: Time Allowed: One Hour
Contract Law Mock Examination: Date: Time Allowed: One Hour
DATE:
There are 50 marks available for this examination. It has two parts:
This part contains two questions. You must attempt one question.
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
QUESTION 1
A. Social and domestic agreements are never binding because the parties do not
intend them to have legal consequences.
QUESTION 2
For which ONE of the following propositions of law is the case of Carlill v
Carbolic Smoke Ball Company NOT an authority?
A. An offer may be made to all the world, and accepted by anyone who performs
the stipulation contained within it.
B. Acceptance of an offer should usually be notified, but the language and nature
of the transaction may show that notice of acceptance is not required.
C. Offers of unilateral contracts cannot be revoked once the act of acceptance has
started.
D. An offer must show an intention to be legally bound, rather than being “mere
puff”.
QUESTION 4
B. The offeror can only revoke an offer by appointing an agent to revoke it on their
behalf.
QUESTION 5
C. The promise of extra payment can only be enforced if it was made under
duress.
Colin Wade owns C &W, a retailer with several shops in West London.
Set out below in Documents A, B, C and D is the correspondence which had passed
between the parties
Colin says he had decided to buy the jackets after not getting any response to his
enquiry of 27 October. He had posted the letter on 28 October with a first class
stamp but Marquin says it did not receive it until Monday 2 November - after the 30
October cut-off date - and had ignored it because the jackets had been sent off to
Camden Market.
I have a copy of your September 20XX clothing catalogue. I’m interested in buying
250 of the men’s leather jackets (50 small, 100 medium, 50 large and 50 extra-
large) from the Bufflecuir range. Could you give me a price and a delivery date?
Thank you for your enquiry. We could do you 250 Bufflecuir as set out in your e-
mail at an all-in price of £27,500. They are available for collection straight away
from our Finchley depot. Please reply by close of business on Friday 30 October if
you want to go ahead, as we’ll be putting them through Camden Market the next
week otherwise.
Yours sincerely,
Thanks for your letter of yesterday, received this morning. Would you be able to
knock a bit off the price if I were to collect them and pay cash?
Yours sincerely
Colin Wade
C&W
Rohan is a keen cyclist who runs his own business repairing bicycles. He rents a
small lock-up workshop from Hansaj. Six months ago he met with Hansaj. and
explained that he had been suffering financial difficulties and might have to close his
business. Hansaj, realising that he would have difficulty finding another tenant for the
workshop agreed to reduce the rent by £50 per month.
Two months ago, Rohan managed to negotiate a lucrative contract to service and
repair the bicycles of the Chester cycling club.
Yesterday Rohan met Sheila at his friend Krishna’s house. Sheila, Krishna’s cousin,
had cycled round to the house. On the way there, however, there was a problem with
the cycle’s brakes and she had been unable to change gear properly. Sheila was
worried about riding the cycle in its current condition and so asked Rohan to have a
look at it for her. He repaired the cycle relatively quickly, but Sheila was so grateful
she said she would send him £30. Rohan was surprised. He said that he had been
happy to help out but thanked her, saying the money would come in useful.
Hansaj has just found out about Rohan’s lucrative contract and is now demanding he
resume paying the original rent. He is also demanding the sum of £100 being the
difference between the original rent and reduced rent for the past two months.
Advise Rohan:
whether he will have to resume paying the original rent, and is liable to
pay the sum of £100 to Hansaj; and
whether he is entitled to £30 from Sheila.