Consideration Essay

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In the Oxford Dictionary of Law, consideration is defined as ‘An act, forbearance, or promise by one party to a contract that constitutes the price for which he buys the promise of the other. Consideration is essential to the validity of any contract other than one made by deed. Without consideration an agreement not made by deed is not binding; it is a nudum pactum (naked agreement), governed by the maxim ex nudo pacto non oritur action (a right of action does not arise out of a naked agreement).’ Without consideration, it is very hard to prove that a contract has been form, as it is an important element. In the English Legal System requires that a promise must be legally binding. Whether this must be either contained in a deed, or a simple contract, consideration must have been given in order for a contract to be valid.

        The doctrine of consideration has developed over many centuries. Originally the doctrine of consideration was only based on a moral obligation. This theory can be seen in the case of Stone v. Withpool (1588), where the judge said, “every consideration that doth charge the defendant in an assumpsit must be to the benefit of the defendant or charge of the plaintiff, and no case can be put out of this rule.”  However in the Eighteenth Century, Lord Mansfield took an open-minded attitude towards the topic of consideration as an essential requirement. In the case of Rann v Hughes (1778), he ‘argued that a previous moral obligation was sufficient consideration for a future gratuitous promise.’ Then, in the case of Hawkes v. Saunders (1782), Lord Mansfield said, “when a man is under a moral obligation, which no court of Law or Equity can enforce, and promises, the honesty and rectitude of the thing is consideration… The ties of conscience upon an uptight mind are a sufficient consideration.” Things really developed in the Nineteenth Century, in the case of Eastwood v Kenyon (1840), where the moral obligation caused the promise to be insufficient. Later the idea of detriment and benefit and was drawn into the doctrine, along with the idea of consideration being something of value in the judgment of the law, in the mid- nineteenth century. This final doctrine of consideration was described in Thomas v Thomas (1842), “Consideration means something which is of some value in the eye of the law, moving from the plaintiff; it may be some detriment to the plaintiff or some benefit to the defendant, but at all events it must be moving from the plaintiff.” 

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        In order for a contract to be legally binding, there must be offer and acceptance, intention to create legal relation and consideration, which is a major element which the courts have to consider. On the other hand however, in family and social arrangements, it is not uncommon for people to make promises seeking nothing in return- so it is called gratuitous promises. ‘The doctrine of consideration seems to mean that gratuitous promises are not enforceable unless they are made by deed.’ This means that the law will enforce bargains not promises, because there are certain elements which are part of ...

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