Subject: Business Law
A contract is binding on the parties because, at the time of entering into the agreement, they freely and knowingly agreed to fulfill the specified responsibilities. A person has a moral obligation to fulfill any obligations he or she took on for themselves. Dispute-related aspects of free consent Coercion, Negative Influence, Misrepresentation, Fraud, Error.
A contract is binding on the parties because, at the time it was made, they freely and knowingly agreed to fulfill the specified responsibilities. A person has a moral obligation to fulfill any obligations he or she took on for themselves. The law holds that a person is liable for his contract on this moral basis. The parties must bear this obligation voluntarily and on their own behalf. On the other hand, a contract is a way of expressing the freedom of choice that is actually realized if the parties create it of their own volition.
Example:
There are two ways to define "free consent":
An agreement must be entered into voluntarily and with the parties' free consent in order to be legally binding. If it is established that one party's permission was gained at the time of the agreement by another without that party's free consent, the agreement may be revoked at the discretion of the person whose consent was not truly free. The following are some factors that make it necessary or important:
Without freely given permission, the arrangement is voidable as illegal. A contract is voidable when:
As a result, the party whose permission was not freely given may file a case with the requisite evidence with the court to have the contract declared void. The agreement is legally binding and enforceable if the other party accepts it or does not file a lawsuit within the allotted time period. The injured party who wants to declare the contract void has the burden of evidence. The intriguing thing is that the party who was free to assent at the time of the agreement, even though he may be in loss now, cannot file an action to void the contract.
The term "vitiation aspects of a free consent" refers to those elements or variables that adversely affect a person's free consent in a contract. Coercion, undue influence, false representation, fraud, or error are some examples of these factors. The following is a succinct summary of those components:
In general, it refers to the unlawful use of force by one person against the will of another in order to win that person's consent to a deal. Therefore, the consent is said to have been obtained through coercion if it was obtained through the imposition of harm or the threat of harm that is unlawful against the life, property, or persons of the contracting party, or, in extremely rare circumstances, against other people. Because it is a prohibited act, the person who commits it could face criminal charges. The use of coercion renders a contract voidable since it undermines the party's free will.
Example:
It is commonly referred to as mental pressure. A contract may be canceled owing to improper influence:
The aforementioned contract becomes an unconscionable bargain and, as a result, is not legal to enforce if the aforementioned conditions are met. Parent/guardian and children/wards, master and servant, doctor and patient, teacher and student, spiritual leader and disciple, etc. are instances of controlling or fiduciary relationships.
Example:
When a party makes a statement about the facts of the contract's subject matter that turns out to be false, that statement is referred to be a misrepresentation. In reality, the consent of one party is said to have been obtained through misrepresentation if it was obtained by the other party by providing inaccurate facts without being aware of the true facts or believing the statements so said were true and without intending to deceive or hurt the other party. It's sometimes referred to as unintentional misrepresentation.
Example:
Consequently, a claim becomes a misrepresentation:
It has been purposefully misrepresented. Therefore, the consent is said to have been obtained through fraud if the false statement was made at the time of the agreement with the intention of obtaining the assent of another party while that party had knowledge of the true/real facts pertaining to the subject of the contract or while that party did not believe the facts stated were true. It is a deliberate lie that justifies the criminal behavior. A false statement becomes fraud as a result:
Example:
It is a person's false assumption about the truth of a certain subject. Therefore, consent is said to have been caused by error if, during the negotiation of an agreement, one or both parties mistook or misunderstood the facts pertaining to the contract's subject matter. The permission is void-ab-initio when it was given inadvertently. The error can be broadly divided into two categories: mistake of law and mistake of fact. While an error of fact renders a contract unenforceable, an error of law is not a basis for doing so.
The factual error could be bilateral or unilateral. The contract is considered unilateral and, generally speaking, the parties are nonetheless bound by it even if just one of the contracting parties misinterpreted the facts pertaining to the contract's subject matter. But in the following cases, the contract is void:
Example:
Any time there is a bilateral error, the contract is void. The bilateral error could be:
References:
Business Law, Ram Prasad Shrestha;M.K Books, Bhotahity, Kathmandu,2013
Merchantile law, ICAI, 2013
Dispute-related aspects of free consent:
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