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					OFFERS, CONTRACTS AND RELATED ISSUES: EFFECTIVE CONTRACT WRITING COURSE OBJECTIVES  To provide a substantive review of offers, contracts and related issues to assist licensees to do the following:   More effectively explain to clients and customers the process and the documents for writing offers and amending contracts Prepare offers and contracts that are both well-written and legally enforceable COURSE OBJECTIVES (CONTINUED)      To revisit the distinction between an “offer” and a “contract” To review essential elements of a contract To review additional elements required for valid real estate contracts To examine documents for the presence of required elements and the consequent “status” of such documents To review the methods by which contracts are discharged and the implications thereof I. THE DEFINITION OF AN OFFER  A. A proposal intended to create a contract upon acceptance by the person to whom it is made.     The offer must state expectations with specificity. Terms of a bona fide offer must be certain enough to be accepted in court. Names of parties and identification of the subject matter must be included clearly An offer must be communicated to be effective.   Actual communication occurs when an offer is received Constructive communication occurs whether the offeree, having received the offer, reads it or not. DEFINITION OF AN OFFER (CONTINUED)  B. Generally, an offeror may withdraw an offer at any time before the offeree accepts the offer:    Actual communication of revocation makes it effective Communication to agent representing offeree might be sufficient Implied revocation: the offeree learns from a reliable source that the offeror has acted in a manner not compatible with the outstanding offer DEFINITION OF AN OFFER (CONTINUED)  C. An offeree may simply reject an offer by communicating to the offeror a refusal to accept the offer:    A counteroffer by the offeree is an implied rejection Deciding to accept after communicating a rejection is still a rejection New attempt to accept a rejected offer results in nothing more than a counteroffer DEFINITION OF AN OFFER (CONTINUED)  D. An offeror may specify an expiration date for an offer:   A purported acceptance after the expiration date is ineffective. If no date is specified, the offer lapses after a reasonable period of time. DEFINITION OF AN OFFER (CONTINUED)  E. What an offer “is not”!   An offer is not a binding agreement between the offeror and the offeree. An offeror is not bound to accept an “acceptance” of an offer, although some other obligation might accrue by reason of some other agreement.   e.g., a seller listing agreement e.g., a buyer representation agreement DEFINITION OF AN OFFER (CONCLUDED)  F. For an offer to ripen into a contract, the offeree must accept the terms of the offer:  Ready, willing, and able acceptance  Communication of the acceptance  Acceptance of the “acceptance” by the offeror II. DEFINITION OF A CONTRACT   A voluntary, legally enforceable promise between two competent parties to perform a legal act in exchange for a consideration. A legally enforceable promise or set of promises that must be performed and for which, if a breach of the promise occurs, the law provides a remedy. III. THE ELEMENTS OF A CONTRACT  Competent parties  Offer and acceptance  Consideration  Lawful purpose IV. ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS FOR REAL ESTATE PURCHASE CONTRACTS  Legal description  Compliance with the Statute of Frauds  Virginia contract law    Does not invalidate oral contracts Prevents the enforcement of an oral contract Addresses enforceability V. DISTINGUISHING FEATURES OF CONTRACTS  Bilateral vs. unilateral  Express vs. implied  Executory vs. fully executed VI. STATUS OF A CONTRACT  VALID  VOIDABLE  VOID  UNENFORCEABLE VII. SPECIFIC CONSIDERATIONS          Ratification Earnest money deposits Equitable title Contingencies and conditions Standard clauses Disclosures Disclaimers Personal property sale agreements Bills of sale VIII. DISCHARGE OF CONTRACTS       Performance Assignment Novation Anticipatory breach, breach, and legal remedies Rescission Termination IX. ANCILLARY DOCUMENTS  Addenda  Amendments  Parol evidence and the Rule  Release of contract THE “ABC’S” OF CONTRACT WRITING: AGREEING TO AGREE  A’s:  Agreements  Amendments  Addenda  Affirmations THE “ABC’S”  (CONTINUED) B’s:  Bona fide offers  Bilateral features  Bifurcated conditions  But “what” if “not” THE “ABC’S”  (CONCLUDED) C’s: Contracts  Contingencies  Clauses  Covenants  Closings 
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            