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Laws and Regulations - ContractsAn agreement to rent a place to live is a contract. When you enter into a contract you undertake legal obligations and agree to certain rules in your relationship with the other party to the contract. There are two significant obligations to which each party agrees:
What is a legal contract? A legal contract is an agreement between two or more people that can be enforced under the law. In order for the law to enforce the agreement, the contract must have certain characteristics:
Both parties to the contract must receive something of value, a legal consideration, for their agreement. For example, in a rental agreement, the landlord receives the rent and the tenant receives the right to live in the apartment. If an agreement does not have all the above characteristics it is not a valid contract and cannot be enforced by law. Does a contract have to be in writing? A contract does not have to be in writing. An oral or spoken contract is valid as long as it has the legal characteristics of a contract. However, a written contract will provide a record of the terms the parties agree to. In cases of disagreements, the agreements made in an oral contract are much harder to prove. How does the law of contract affect agreements to rent a place to live?The law of contract has many rules that deal with the ways in which contracts are made, interpreted, carried out, broken, and ended. The law of contract applies to agreements to rent a place to live, unless the law has been changed by an Act of the Legislature. Once you become a party to a valid contract, you undertake legal obligations. For the purposes of agreements to rent a place to live, there are two kinds of obligations:
January 2006 |
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