losing party would be subject to very harsh and unreasonable bc the contract was unenforced Categories of illegal agreements 1)that violate statutes (break laws or are directly assisting in broken laws) 2)violate public policy 3)unconscionable agreements and contracts of adhesion Noncompetition clauses 1) Clause must serve a legitimate business purpose 2) The restriction on competition must be reasonable in time‚ geographic area and scope.3) The clause should not impose any undue hardship.. -Very
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Re: Applicable Employment Laws for Landslide Limousines Dear Mr. Stonefield‚ As per our conversation‚ I understand that you want to start a Limousine Service with 25 employees on your first year of business. During my research I found that there are applicable laws for the State of Texas. There are 5 specific laws that needs to be address in order to having a successful business. In this memo we will provide your company a brief description of the employment laws that should be implemented
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Steven Westgate BUS345.01 Business Law I Chapters 9‚ 10‚ 11‚ 12‚ 13‚ 14‚ 15‚ 16‚ 17‚ and 18 Professor Sappington November 3‚ 2003 1) This would indeed be a contract called an implied-in-fact contract. This is a contract that is implied from the conduct of the parties. Unlike other contracts‚ the contract was created through the conduct of the parties‚ not through words. This is what Miller and McCleskey have done. The parties both agreed through their
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Apand Pty Ltd (1999) has been important cases in the history of Tort Law. Negligence is a complex term including advertent and inadvertent acts and omissions where there has been a failure to take reasonable care to prevent loss‚ damage or injury to others whom they could reasonably have foreseen might have been injured if that care was not taken. (Pentony at al. 2011) There are different categories of negligence and the one concerning the above mentioned cases is Pure Economic Loss. A claim for ‘pure’
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Week II Assignment Group II – Cases 8 & 10 Case 8: Galindo v. Town of Clarkstown Identify the parties involved in the case dispute (who is the plaintiff and who is the defendant). The case involves Mr. Galindo’s wife as the plaintiff and her employer‚ Mr. Richard Clark‚ as the defendant. Identify the facts associated with the case and fact patterns. Javier Galindo‚ the husband of the plaintiff‚ was sitting in his car in the driveway of Mr. Clark’s property waiting to pick up his wife
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BUSINESS LAW EXAM1 1. One rule that emerges from the social contract is that people should never make unsupported judgments about one another but should instead always investigate the facts in an effort to uncover the truth about the character of a person or the nature of a situation. 2. utility thinking. 3. there are no objective or absolute standards of right and wrong. 4. utility thinking. 5. ethics. 6. If the social contract disintegrates‚ society would return to a "state
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Business law and ethics Ref book: Commercial law and Industrial law
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utilitarianism focuses on the consequences of an action‚ an action will be a ethical one if the end result creates the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people. It counts both quantity and quality of happiness. In the news of the world case‚ overhear and hacking devices had been installed to people’s private phones. The consequences of doing this are: people had more reading funs; some people‚ especially those celebrities lost their personal privacy; the sales of the news of the world
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Assignment on Business Law Topic: Identify the food product (Maggi 2-Minute noodles)‚ Cigarette (British American Tobacco Group)‚ Electronic good (Symphony mobile phone) are safe or unsafe under the Consumer Rights Protection Act 2009. Submitted by: Group-5 Name ID. No. Muhammad Shahreer Imran (L) 100206007 Md. Masud Rana 100106002 Naguib Jahan Shafi 100206014 Md. Akhlas Hossain Subuz 110106019 Surma Akter Mili 100206003
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Oziel Adrián Juárez Tamez A01035050 Business and Management III Alicia Romero Case Study Unit 37: Carl Hurst Balti Pies a) Calculate the contribution per batch of pies. A: Contribution = Selling Price – Variable Cost Contribution = 100(50p) - £20 Contribution = £50 - £20 Contribution = £30 b) How many batches would Carl need to produce in his first year of trading to break-even. A: Break-even output = Fixed costs/Contribution Break-even output = (£2‚500 + £500)/£30 Break-even
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