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Also known as agreement, binding contract, contracts, contract as promise
обмен обязательствами в гражданском праве
A contract is a legally enforceable agreement between two or more parties that specifies their rights and obligations, typically involving the transfer of goods, services, or money—either now or in the future. If one party breaks the contract, the other party can take the matter to court to seek remedies like financial compensation or to force the other party to fulfill their obligations.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Догово́р (мн. ч. — догово́ры) — соглашение между собой двух или более сторон (субъектов), по какому-либо вопросу с целью установления, изменения или прекращения правовых отношений. Служит источником обязательств, нравственных или юридических. Договор является одной из древнейших правовых конструкций. Сейчас он используется во многих отраслях частного и публичного права. Происходит от слова говор, говорить — речь, беседа; сообщаться устною речью, даром слова; произносить слова, выражать мысли. Ещё со времён римского права различают вербальные (устные) и литеральные (письменные) договоры. Иногда возможно заключение договора посредством конклюдентных (согласительных) действий. По количеству субъектов договоры подразделяются на двусторонние и многосторонние. Одной из разновидностей многостороннего договора является учредительный договор. Возможны также договоры в пользу третьего лица, не являющегося его стороной. По наличию обязательств договоры подразделяются на возмездные и безвозмездные. Также выделяют договоры консенсуальные (обязательства возникают после достижения соглашения) и реальные (обязательства возникают после определённого действия).
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).
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contract | Wex | US Law | LII / Legal Information Institute
law.cornell.edu →Contracts are legally enforceable promises . Most contract law derives from state common law , though statutory law supplements it. While the general principles are consistent nationwide, state courts may interpret individual elements differently. A party that breaches a valid contract may be required to pay damages or, in rare cases, perform the promised act . Bargain -for-Exchange Theory: Consideration exists when the promisor makes a promise in exchange for something given by the promisee to induce that promise. The focus is on the parties’ intent and the reciprocal nature of the exchange. Benefit -Detriment Theory: Consideration exists when the promise results in a legal benefit to the promisor or a legal detriment to the promisee. Gratuitous promises (pure gifts ) are not enforceable because they lack a sufficient detriment or exchange. Common law (judge-made law), Statutory law, such as the Statute of Frauds , which requires certain contracts to be in writing, and Private law, meaning the terms agreed to by the parties. Even informal agreements may be binding if the elements of contract formation are present. In Lucy v. Zehmer , 196 Va. 493 (1954) , the Virginia Supreme Court upheld a contract written on a restaurant napkin because both parties demonstrated mutual assent and consideration. The Restatements of Contracts synthesize many common-law principles, while the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) governs contracts for the sale of goods . Relevant UCC articles include: Internationally, the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) governs cross-border sales contracts for member states, including the United States. If an agreement lacks the necessary elements of a legally enforceable contract, the courts will neither compel performance nor grant damages for nonperformance. For valid contracts, remedies are designed to make the non-breaching party whole (meaning in the position they would have occupied had the contract been performed), including any reasonably foreseeable consequential damages resulting from the breach. Punitive damages are not available for breach of contract, and the non-breaching party may not recover more than the contract’s expectancy value or the monetary benefit that full performance would have provided. In limited circumstances, promises that do not constitute enforceable contracts may still be enforced to prevent injustice. Under the equitable doctrine of promissory estoppel , a court may award reliance damages if one party reasonably and detrimentally relied on another’s promise. Similarly, a court may award restitution or unjust enrichment when one party confers a benefit on another, and it would be inequitable for the recipient to retain that benefit without compensation . Modern contract law scrutinizes contracts of adhesion , or standardized “form contracts” that are drafted by one party with greater bargaining power and presented on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. Common examples include mortgage agreements, consumer lease agreements, and online service contracts. Courts may decline to enforce unconscionable or unfair terms in such agreements.
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