Contract Formation
Contract Performance
UCC
Torts
Product Liability
100

The 5 elements of a valid contract

What are:

Offer

Acceptance

Consideration

Capacity

Legality

100

Defenses to enforcing a valid contract include which of the following:

  • Duty
  • Duress
  • Defamation
  • Damages

What is duress?

100

Name the two requirements for the UCC to govern a contract

Contract is for goods

One party is a merchant


100

Which of the following are elements of the tort of negligence:

  • Duty
  • Duress
  • Defamation
  • Damages

Duty, Damages

100

Which of these is a legal theory you can use to sue for injury from a product:

  • Negligence
  • Breach of contract
  • Breach of warranty
  • Causation

Negligence

Breach of Warranty

200

The method by which you terminate your offer when you take it back before the other party accepts

What is "revocation"?

200

What does it mean when you claim that a fact is "material"?

That the fact is relevant to the decision (i.e. whether to accept the offer).

200

Contracts that aren’t governed by the UCC are governed by...

State common law

200

You are hired to be a pizza delivery driver after a thorough background check.  Your boss tells you to drive very carefully, and you do, but you accidentally rear-end a car at a stoplight.  Explain why your boss isn’t liable for your conduct.

No negligent hiring or supervision

No instructions to commit a tort

200

The coffee shop offers a new drink called “Exam Week Blitz” and states that the drink will keep you awake for a long time.  Explain why this is not a warranty.

Because there is no explicit promise (i.e. "a long time" is not provable).

300

Your boss agrees to pay you an eco-bonus of $200 at the end of the month if, during that time, you refrain from driving a gas-powered car to and from work.  Is this valid consideration?  Explain your answer in writing (2 minutes)

Yes because you are giving up a legal right to do something (commute via gas-powered car).

300

When you rely on information, do you learn this information before or after acceptance of an offer?

Before

300

You know a lot about running shoes, but you keep this knowledge to yourself.  Have you “held yourself out to have knowledge or skill” like a merchant does?

No

300

Write out how contributory negligence is different from comparative negligence.

Contributory - if Plaintiff's behavior played any role in injury, Plaintiff can't recover.


Comparative - if Plaintiff's behavior played a role, Plaintiff's recovery is reduced by that % (up to 50%)

300

A microwave is recalled because it tends to melt food after only 20 seconds.  Is this a marketing, manufacturing, or design defect?

Design

400

A example of a “term” in a contract

What is price/quantity/date/item type, etc.?

400

Write out the difference between ending contract duties through breach vs through discharge by agreement. (2 min)

Breach - K ends because one party doesn't fulfill duties.

Discharge by agreement - both parties agree not to fully fulfill duties.

400

A merchant offers to sell a good to you.  The merchant delivers this signed promise in writing to you today, and promises the good can be sold to you for that price through April 30th.  Is this a merchant’s firm offer?  Explain in writing the main reason for your answer (1 min).

No because the offer is being held open for more than 3 months; it is only valid through March 11th.

400

How is contributory negligence different from assumption of risk?

Contrib - used when Plaintiff's behavior played a role in their injury


Assumption of risk - used when P's behavior did not play a role but P engaged in a dangerous activity with known risks

400

Write out the difference between the defense of substantial alteration and the defense of unforeseeable use.

Alteration - product was changed in a significant way

Use - product was not changed but was used in an unforeseeable way

500

Not part of the definition of “legal capacity”:

  • Being relatively smart
  • Age
  • A judicial determination of mental capacity

What is "being relatively smart"?

500

To claim the defense of “undue influence”, a party must first prove that what exists?

A pre-existing relationship between the parties

500

Explain how acceptance and the mirror-image rule differs in UCC vs non-UCC contracts

UCC - can accept with different terms (unless one of the 3 exceptions is present)

Non-UCC - acceptance must be mirror-image; any change in terms turns the "acceptance" into a counteroffer.

500

Why can’t a party sue for nominal and for compensatory damages?

Because they mean opposite things.  Nominal is given when there aren't monetary damages.  Compensatory is given when they are quantifiable damages.

500

You purchase a piano.  The implied warranty of merchantability means:

The piano will be of average quality and work as expected for ordinary use

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