Module Identifier LA35830  
Module Title LAW OF CONTRACT  
Academic Year 2007/2008  
Co-ordinator Dr David A Poyton  
Semester Semester 2 (Taught over 2 semesters)  
Other staff Dr David A Poyton, Dr Ruth D Atkins  
Co-Requisite LA10110 or LA30101 or LA15710  
Mutually Exclusive LA35310 , LA15830  
Course delivery Lecture   40 Hours. - Three one hour lectures per week  
  Seminars / Tutorials   8 Hours. - Four one hour seminars in each semester  
Assessment
Assessment TypeAssessment Length/DetailsProportion
Semester Exam2 Hours At the end of the second semester. Students are permitted to take an unmarked copy of Blackstones Statutes in Contract, Tort and Restitution into the exam.  67%
Semester Assessment Essay: Assessed essay of 2000 words required in Week 8 of Semester 2  33%
Semester Assessment Essay: Non assessed compulsory essay of 2000 words required in week 6 of semester 1  0%
Supplementary Assessment2 Hours Resit: By retaking the failed element (ie written assignment or examination or both, as applicable)   
Professional Exemptions Required for Professional Purposes  

Learning outcomes

To give the student a good understanding of contract law as a largely common law subject and to develop the students understanding of precedent and the use of legal argument based on case law. To develop the student's skills in applying contract law to particular questions /problems. To meet the requirements for professional exemption. To equip the students to study further modules which rely on a knowledge of contract law.

Brief description

Contract law is part of the fabric of our everyday lives. We make contracts when we buy a newspaper or travel on a bus. Obviously not all contracts are of those simple types. Contracts dealing with the construction of ships or buildings will be highly complex. Nevertheless, across that spectrum the underlying principles of contract law remain the same and it is those basic principles which are the subject matter of this course. Contract law is a foundation subject and is normally studied in the first year of the degree scheme. The course aims to provide a solid grounding in the rules of Contract Law as a legal area on which others will build. However, it does not simply aim to provide a view of the law as a set of rules but as an area developing in the light of tensions within the law and the difficulties encountered in particular contexts. As a course taken at the start of legal study, it also has an important role in developing basic legal skills. The aim is to promote an understanding of how a legal area which is largely based on case law develops.

Aims

To give the student a good understanding of contract law and, in so doing, to further the development of an awareness of the need for, and use of, accurate language; a logical approach to problems; legal analytical skills; effective communication skills, both orally and on paper and a critical approach to law and legal argument.

Content

Teaching
The main contract law modules are taught through lectures and seminars. The lecture is a means of introducing the basic rules and highlighting difficulties and tensions within the law. Seminars are an interactive learning process for the student, based upon the student's, private study of the area under review. Questions are set for seminars to enhance the student's understanding of Contract Law and also to develop their skills in dealing with precedent and statutory interpretation. Students are encouraged to take a critical approach to the law, identifying the tensions within it and the context of its development. Students are required to do one piece of written work in each semester. These will take the form either of problem or essay questions. Both pieces of written work are compulsory. The piece of written work in the second semester will count towards the final assessment for the course.

Syllabus

1. Introduction to the Law of Contract.

2. Formation of the Contract.

3. Intention to create legal relations.

4. Consideration.

5. Privity.

6. Express and Implied Terms.

7. Conditions, Warranties and Innominate Terms.

8. Exemption clauses & Unfair Terms.

9. Misrepresentation.

10. Duress and undue influence.

11. Mistake.

12. Frustration.

13. Performance and Breach.

14. Remedies.

15. An outline of the Law of Restitution.

Reading Lists

Books
** Recommended Text
Koffman & MacDonald The Law of Contract 4th. Tolley
Poole Casebook on Contract Blackstone
Smith & Thomas A Casebook on Contract Sweet & Maxwell

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 6