AGREEMENT,
contract. The consent of two or more persons concurring, respecting the
transmissiou of some property, right or benefit, with a view of
contracting an obligation. Bac. Ab. h.t.; Com. Dig. h.t.; Vin. Ab. h.t.;
Plowd. 17; 1 Com. Contr. 2; 5 East's R. 16. It will be proper to
consider, 1, the requisites of an agreement; 2, the kinds of agreements;
3, how they are annulled.
2.
– 1. To render an agreement complete six things must concur; there must
be, 1, a person able to contract; 2, a person able to be contracted
with; 3, a thing to be contracted for; 4, a lawful consideration, or
quid pro quo; 5, words to express the agreement; 6, the assent of the
contracting parties. Plowd. 161; Co. Litt. 35, b.
3.
– 2. As to their form, agreements are of two kinds; 1, by parol, or, in
writing, as contradistinguished from specialties; 2, by specialty, or
under seal. In relation to their performance, agreements are executed or
executory. An agreement is said to be executed when two or more persons
make over their respective rights in a thing to one another, and
thereby change the property therein, either presently and at once, or at
a future time, upon some event that shall give it full effect, without
either party trusting to the other; as where things are bought, paid for
and delivered. Executory agreements, in the ordinary acceptation of the
term, are such contracts as rest on articles, memorandums, parol
promises, or undertakings, and the like, to be performed in future, or
which are entered into preparatory to more solemn and formal alienations
of prtperty. Powel on Cont. Agreements are also conditional and
unconditional. They are conditional when some condition must be
fulfilled before they can have full effect; they are unconditional when
there is no condition attached;
4.
– 3. Agreements are annulled or rendered of no effect, first, by the
acts of the parties, as, by payment; release – accord and satisfction;
rescission, which is express or implied; 1 Watts & Serg. 442;
defeasance; by novation: secondly, by the acts of the law, as,
confusion; merger; lapse of time; death, as when a man who has bound
himself to teach an apprentice, dies; extinction of the thing which is
the subject of the contract, as, when the agreement is to deliver a
certain horse and before the time of delivery he dies. See Discharge of a
Contract.
5. The writing or instrument containing an agreement is also called an agreement, and sometimes articles of agreement.(q. V.)
6.
It is proper, to remark that there is much dfference between an
agreement and articles of agreement which are only evidence of it. From
the moment that the parties have given their consent, the agreement or
contraet is formed, and, whether it can be proved or not, it has not
less the quality to bind both contracting parties. A want of proof does
not make it null, because that proof may be supplied aliunde, and the
moment it is obtained, the contract may be enforced.
7.
Again, the agreement may be mull, as when it was obtained by fraud,
duress, and the like; and the articles of agreement may be good, as far
as the form is concerned. Vide Contract. Deed; Guaranty; Parties to
Contracts.
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