explain three stages of Contract law, Offer, Acceptance and Revocation and how they apply to the given situation. As a marketing strategy Winder Ltd placed an advertisement in the ‘Dailey News’ newspaper and on their website offering ‘Free unlimited E-Books for a year available to its first 30 new customers, stating they must apply on-line before the 5th November 2011. By taking up this offer the reader will be entering into a contract with Winder Ltd. A contract is a legal agreement and
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Sources of Pakistani Mercantile Law Mercantile law is a part of civil law. It governs and regulates the trade and commerce in the country. Mercantile law deals with the needs of a business man. This includes laws relating to insurance, partnerships, contracts, companies, negotiable instruments, arbitration, carriage of goods etc. A mercantile law in Pakistan is taken from the English law. So it follows the English laws to a considerable extent with some modifications and reservations to suite with the
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Issues Simulation Summary 1. What are the issues involved in resolving legal disputes in international transactions? The issues involved in resolving legal disputes in international transactions include but are not limited to the signing of contracts designed to protect both parties, choice of clause, which forum to use when settling a dispute and if arbitration, if used, will be binding or nonbinding. Something else to think about when resolving legal disputes in international transactions would
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Essentials of a Contract As a senior manager in the procurement section of the Ministry, I would advise the following: there was a contract i.e. an agreement; an offer and its acceptance, an agreement that had essential elements. The first was that there was a proper offer and acceptance which were officially and unconditionally communicated. Further there was an intention to create a legal relationship by the two parties after fulfillment of the tender requirements, to construct a modern administration
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management of the essential proposal data and documents. The general business process is described by the following figure: 1.3. Goal of the negotiation Collection and finalisation of all the documents and information required to produce a contract for a given proposal (for any instrument and funding system of FP6, see Annex 1). Implementation of the recommendations of the experts and requirements imposed by the Commission. 1.4. Characteristics of the negotiation The negotiation is an interactive
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Assignment 1: Consensual Relationship Agreements Case Study Due Week 3 and worth 100 points Read the Consensual Relationship Agreements case study located in Chapter 2. In Questions 1 and 2, focus on non-ethical ramifications (save any discussion of ethics for Question 3). Write a six to eight (6-8) page paper in which you: • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format
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Basis for Bid Evaluation 11 1.10. Ethical Standards 11 1.11. Responsibility for Surety Bonds 11 1.12. Proposal Format 11 1.13. List of Bidders 11 1.14. Letter of Acknowledgment 11 2. DESCRIPTION OF WORK 12 2.1. Engineering Contracts 12 2.2. Construction Contracts 13 3. PROPOSAL 13 3.1. Breakdown of Bid Price 14 3.2. Revisions and Extra Work 14 3.3. Escalation Formulas 14 3.4. Scheduled Completion Dates 14 3.5. List of Subcontractors 14 3.6. Key Supplier or Contractor Personnel 14 3
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James H. Vricos, Professor LEG505 – Government Contract Law November 19, 2012 * Assignment 3: Acquisition Planning Due Week 6 and worth 200 points Civilian agencies obligated over $135 billion in fiscal year 2010 for services--80 percent of total civilian spending on contracts. Services acquisitions have suffered from inadequate planning, which puts budget, schedule, and quality at risk. For this assignment
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Islamic Contract Law TYPES OF COMMITMENTS 1. Wa‘d – • • • – وunilateral promise One party binds itself to perform a function for another Does not normally create legal obligation Legal obligation is created: • • Genuine need of the masses – (ر Contingent promise ا س )رد ا ز ن ز ا إذ ا 2. Muwaa‘ada – ا ة • • • • – bilateral promise Two parties performing two unilateral promises on the same subject Use of two unilateral promises can lead to a forward contract, which
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customer protection. These acts and rules are the next: 1) The Data protection act 1998; 2) The Customer protection act 1998; 3) British codes of advertising and sales promotion; 4) The Distance selling laws 2000; 5) The Unfair contract act 1977 and 1999 laws; 6) The Sales of goods act 1979; 7) The Customer credit act 1974; 8) The Commerce presentation act 1968. So at the very beginning, a basic question in customer protection: who is the customer? The idea of
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