Synopses & Reviews
The last edition of this book saw a major restructuring of the whole work, and an attempt to introduce a number of new themes, in particular, to stress the resurgence of freedom of contract ideology, and to introduce some basic economic issues in contract law. In this edition, the general structure of the book has been left untouched, although the whole work has been completely updated and modernized by replacing old and outdated examples with more modern questions. The aims of the book remain unchanged: to supply a basic introduction, not merely to the law of contact, but also to theories and policies and ideas underlying the subject. In addition, the author has constantly resorted to a modern historical approach, giving the student some sense of how the law has developed over the past 100 years.
Widely recognised as one of the most interesting an innovative books on contract to have been published in the last 25 years, An Introduction to the Law of Contract remains as popular with students and their teachers as it was when it was first published.
Synopsis
Substantially revised and updated, this edition reexamines, in the light of renewed support for the ideology of freedom of contract, many of the arguments formerly levelled against this concept.
Table of Contents
Table of Cases and Statutes
Definition and Classification of Contracts
Contracts made by Parties: Offer and Acceptance
Contracts made by the Courts
Certainty
The Intention to Create Legal Relations
Formalities
Different Kinds of Contractual Duties
Contractual Duties Fixed by the Parties
Contractual Duties Not Fixed by the Parties
The Construction of the Contract
The Duty to Disclose Material Facts
Misrepresentation
Duress and Undue Influence
Unfair Contracts
Void Contracts
Illegal Contracts
The Enforcement of Contractual Rights by Third Parties
The Enforcement of Contractual Rights against Third Parties
Termination and Rescission of Contracts
Remedies for Breach of Contract