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Date Submitted: 08/14/2014 05:57 AM
Learning Team B Weekly Reflection (week 5)
LAW/421
20 August 2013
Learning Team B Weekly Reflection (week 5)
Lately, learning team members conferred the ins-and-outs of contracts, most notably business contracts. Team B discussions [might have] exposed testimonies indicating members direct/indirect association to contracts. Maybe a favorite basketball player just signed one. There might have been member(s) with breaching practice. Still just, maybe a Team B member even signed one. Has the team figured it out though? What is a contract? Learning Team B simply exclaims: “contracts are any promise or set of promises that are legally enforceable” (personal communication, August 19, 2013).
So, it follows that contract law determines what promises are enforced, whether promises have been performed, and remedies for breaches of contract (meaning somebody has broken a contract in some way). These remedies are basically compensation for, or fixes to, the breached part of the contract.
Team B got to the bottom of all the contract brainwork by heeding two particular areas: the sources of contract law and the requirements for a valid contract. We'll start with the sources of contract law.
Sources of Contract Law
Today, two legislative entities govern contract law: The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) and common law. During discussion, Team B decidedly broke down how and when each applies to contract law. What follows is the subsequent prose:
In the chaotic days before the Uniform Commercial Code, each state in our fair union had its own commercial laws. It was anarchy! Well, it wasn't that bad, but things were inconsistent. The UCC was created to establish a uniform set of rules to govern commercial transactions. This, my friends, brought harmony and stability to our great nation-or at least a little consistency. The UCC attempts to unify the national marketplace. The UCC covers a broad range of commercial transactions. For our purposes, when we discuss the UCC,...