The special word “consideration” in contract law refers to something that has value in the eyes of the law.
In contract law, it is said that "consideration must move from the promisee".
Drawing out the subtlety of this statement:
A promise - ie consideration - can be:
Consideration is classified as one of two types:
Consideration is able to be minimal, such as £1.00.
Contracts supported by small consideration are enforceable, because Courts will look for consideration for a promise, rather than examine the commercial merits of the contract.
Courts are reluctant to interfere with contracts which are freely made between contracting parties. If the promises to be performed at a later date or at the time the contract is made, it is sufficient.
The law looks for some value in an economic sense - even minuscule.
For this reason, consideration may be inadequate from a commercial perspective, but for legal purposes:
Reciprocity of consideration is fundamental to contract law.
The exchange of consideration creates a benefit and a burden for each party entering into a contract.
The consideration which is the benefit of the contract for one party (say, receiving money) is the burden of the other (say, paying money).
Without consideration being given by each party to the contract, the contract can't be legally binding.
Accordingly, gratuities are not enforceable in law. For example, this is a gratuity:
A person promises to pay you £10.
You do not offer to do anything in response.
It's a gratuitous promise. One person promises to do something but the other (you) does not promise anything. The promise to pay the £10 is not enforceable.
In legal language, "the offer to pay the £10 is not supported by consideration" or consider does not move from the promisee.
As there is no consideration provided by one party, there is no contract.
The exception to this, is use of a Deed.
Let's put that exception to the general rule to one side.
What sort of consideration is required to properly form a legally binding contract?
There's an essential characteristic of consideration which must exist to form a contract.
Above, 3 types of consideration were listed:
There's another requirement.
The consideration must be fresh consideration.
It's consideration which has not:
Once a contract is signed, consideration can be either:
For example, money which has been promised to be paid under a contract which has been paid is executed consideration.
It may be products yet to be delivered or services yet to be performed. it could be money to be paid, which has not been paid.
So when is this essential characteristic of fresh consideration not present?
When contracting parties are already contracted with one another, a promise to do something that they have already contracted to do can't be "fresh" consideration.
It's consideration which has been provided in the past, and not at the time of formation of the contract.
For example, a buyer of goods who paid £10 in the past. It is not good consideration for supply of new goods, so as to form a new contract.
Likewise, if a party is already required to do something by law, then that also can't be fresh consideration.
The usual forms of these are:
It is a common event that employers ask employees to sign a revised version of their employment contracts. The revised version of the contract usually on worse terms than the original.
Where is the fresh consideration? If consideration does not move from the employer to support the new version, the variation (in legal terms, a "purported variation") is probably not valid or enforceable. If then an employer insists on performing to the new contract - say which contains a reduction in pay, or less favourable working conditions, it may be a repudiatory breach of contract or constructive dismissal.
Also, employment may contain a provision to say that variations can be made to the contract without the consent of the employee. That is a different legal question. The answer relies on a whole lot of moving parts, which we don't cover here.
Informal gratuitous promises, charitable gifts, or promises of sentimental or moral value.
Consideration must be real or sufficient in the sense that it has economic value.
A promise to pay part of a debt is not adequate consideration to discharge a larger debt. That's because there is no fresh consideration for the payment of a smaller sum of money.
The principle is of long standing authority, derived from Foakes v Beer (1884).
The principle is explained as follows:
As a consequence, a creditor is entitled to sue to the debtor for the balance of the debt after payment of the smaller sum.
Fresh consideration however may exist where:
When payments of smaller sums are combined with mutual releases to discharge one another from legal claims that a debtor and creditor may have against one another, those mutual releases may well:
Contracts cannot be upheld where the consideration given by a party is illegal.
Types of illegal consideration include performing some act which is illegal, such as:
On the flip side of the coin, the illegal consideration could be a promise not to do something which a party has legal obligation to do, such as pay tax or comply with some statutory regulatory requirement.
One party to a contract promises to £10 for a witness to give false evidence to a court.
The witness promises to give false evidence to the court, by verifying a witness statement with a statement of truth or in the witness box.
Let's put aside the fact that it would be perjury to do so and probably result in imprisonment of both contracting parties. The consideration (to give false evidence) is (obviously) illegal.
The agreement reached - whether recorded in writing or not - is not supported by consideration.
There's no contract for at least two reasons:
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