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contracts

Contracts are legally binding agreements between two or more parties that establish or modify rights and duties. They can be written, oral, or implied by conduct. Most systems require a valid offer and acceptance, consideration or a comparable exchange, an intention to create legal relations, capacity to contract, and legality of purpose. Some contracts must be in writing or satisfy formalities to be enforceable, under rules such as the statute of frauds.

Formation and content: An offer states a willingness to enter into an agreement on specified terms; acceptance

Performance and breach: When parties fulfill their promises, the contract is discharged. A breach occurs when

Enforceability and interpretation: Courts interpret contract terms and resolve ambiguities according to the contract as a

agrees
to
those
terms
and
creates
mutual
assent.
Consideration
is
the
value
exchanged,
though
some
jurisdictions
recognize
alternative
forms
such
as
deeds.
Contracts
may
be
express
(stated
terms)
or
implied
(inferred
from
conduct).
They
can
be
oral
or
written,
and
many
are
standard
form
contracts
with
boilerplate
clauses.
a
party
fails
to
perform,
delays,
or
departs
from
essential
terms.
Remedies
include
damages
designed
to
put
the
injured
party
in
the
position
they
would
have
been
in,
and
may
include
liquidated
damages.
Specific
performance
or
injunctions
may
be
available
for
unique
subject
matter.
Parties
typically
have
a
duty
to
mitigate
losses,
and
contracts
may
be
terminated
by
performance,
breach,
or
supervening
impossibility
or
illegality.
whole
and
governing
law.
Defenses
to
enforcement
include
misrepresentation,
duress,
lack
of
capacity,
illegality,
coercion,
or
unconscionability.
Contracts
may
allow
assignment
or
delegation
of
rights
and
duties,
though
with
limitations.
The
contract
lifecycle
may
involve
amendments,
novation,
renewal,
or
termination,
and
disputes
are
often
governed
by
specified
forum
and
law.