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Variations on the Theme of Contract


ISBN13: 9780433500643
Published: January 2019
Publisher: LexisNexis Canada
Country of Publication: Canada
Format: Hardcover (119 Pages)
Price: £139.00



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Professor Gerald Fridman was an internationally recognized expert in the law of contracts. Completed posthumously by Professor Rick Bigwood, Variations on the Theme of Contract is an authoritative, engaging text that offers Professor Fridman’s final thoughts on this complex, sometimes confusing, area of law.

Professor Fridman adopted a unique and creative structure for this publication, which consists of a number of independent essays that address various aspects of the law of contract. The collection of essays is divided into a “Prelude” followed by 14 ”Variations,” each of which is introduced by an epigraph from a Stephen Sondheim musical – a nod to the late author’s love of musical theatre.

As Professor Fridman explains in the book’s opening “Prelude,” his “intention in presenting these essays is not to, as it were, tear the law of contract to pieces. Rather, it is to draw attention to developments that merit a critical appreciation.” To that end, Professor Fridman provides a close examination of the evolution and current state of key topics related to contract law, including the freedom of contract, consideration, privity, estoppel, misrepresentation, mistake, interpretation, contractual terms, performance, frustration and unjust enrichment. Throughout, he encourages readers to delve deeper into the subject matter as he fulfills his purpose – “to inform, educate and stimulate thought about the issues that have been raised, and, perhaps, at the same time, to provide some entertaining reading matter.”

The late Professor Emeritus Gerald Fridman, Q.C., F.R.S.C., M.A., B.C.L., LL.M., Hon. D.C.L., was one of Canada’s most respected and influential legal scholars, and a prolific author of more than a dozen legal texts and more than 100 articles, major papers, case notes and book reviews. He was renowned in the fields of contracts, agency, torts, sale of goods and restitution. His work has been cited in more than 50 decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada and in hundreds of lower-court decisions. Professor Fridman studied law at St. John’s College in Oxford, and he held a B.A., B.C.L. and M.A. from the University of Oxford and a Master of Laws from the University of Adelaide in South Australia.

Rick Bigwood, LL.B. (Hons.), Ph.D., LL.D. is a Professor in the T.C. Beirne School of Law at the University of Queensland, Australia. He has also held academic positions at Bond University (2011–2015) and the University of Auckland (1995–2010). Before that, he was a Senior Solicitor with the Australian Attorney-General’s Department in Canberra. He holds an LL.B. (Hons.) and a Doctor of Laws (LL.D.) from the University of Auckland, and a Ph.D. from the Australian National University. He publishes mainly in the area of contract law, including co-authoring, with Nick Seddon, the tenth and eleventh editions of Cheshire and Fifoot Law of Contract for LexisNexis in Australia. He teaches both contract law and property law at the University of Queensland.

Subjects:
Contract Law, Other Jurisdictions , Canada
Contents:
Prelude: The theme
I. Explaining, without deconstructing, contract
II. A note ad hominem
III. The importance and essence of contract
IV. The meaning and form of agreement
V. Communication
VI. Certainty
VII. Evolution
Variation 1: Freedom of contract
I. Contractual limitations
II. The conflict of freedom and consensus
III. Restriction of physical freedom
IV. Illegality
V. Inequality
VI. Avoidance of liability
VII. Requirements rather than restrictions
Variation 2: Considerations about consideration
I. What, why, when
II. Perform or pay?
III. An equitable variation
IV. Permanence
Variation 3: The demystification of privity
I. The idea of privity
II. And the reality
III. A significant departure
IV. A new exception?
V. Another novel exception?
VI. The present situation
VII. What a difference a seal makes
Variation 4: Contracting with the unknown
I. The evolution of contract
II. Requirements to be a principal
III. The emergence of undisclosed principals
IV. The ratification of unauthorized acts
V. The status of an undisclosed principal
VI. The status of the agent of an undisclosed principal
VII. Dealings between agent and principal or third party
VIII. The utility and disutility of undisclosed agency
Variation 5: The ambiguous utility of estoppel
I. What estoppel is and means
II. Estoppel in agency
III. Promissory estoppel
IV. Why ambiguity?
Variation 6: To err is human
I. A basis for invalidity
II. The nature and effect of mistake
III. Fundamental mistakes
IV. Unilateral mistakes
V. Bilateral mistakes
VI. Varieties of error
VII. An abstruse issue
Variation 7: Misstating the truth
I. Misrepresentation and mistake distinguished
II. Fraudulent misrepresentation
III. Negligent misrepresentation
IV. Innocent misrepresentation
V. Comparisons
Variation 8: Interpreting contracts
I. Core issues
II. Adding words to express terms
III. Adding terms to a contract
IV. Postscript: The desire for certainty
Variation 9: The structure of a contract
I. Tunes and terms
II. Conditions and warranties
III. Fundamental terms
IV. Innominate terms
V. The rationale of innominate terms
VI. Understanding a contract
Variation 10: Hors d’oeuvres
I. An unusual use of a word
II. Necessary requirements
III. Exclusion of such contracts
IV. How appetizing is the appetizer?
Variation 11: Contract satisfaction
I. The obligation to perform
II. Parsing the obligation
III. Other pertinent factors
IV. Release from the duty to perform
Variation 12: Contract disrupted
I. External causes
II. Grounds for impossibility or frustration
III. Rationale
IV. When impossibility or frustration does not apply
V. Consequences of the doctrine’s application
VI. The results of the present-day doctrine
Variation 13: The widespread sale of a defective chattel
I. A buyer’s rights
II. The problem stated
III. What is waiver of tort?
IV. The true juridical nature of waiver of tort
V. What torts do and do not support waiver
VI. The impact of this case on the law of contract
Variation 14: From quasi-contract to unjust enrichment
I. Beginnings
II. The era of implied contract
III. The principle of restitution
IV. The emergence and triumph of unjust enrichment
V. The role of unjust enrichment ;