declarations in respect of matters which related to the affairs of the association and for certain other relief‚ which in substance was to enforce his rights under the articles. On an application by the defendants for a stay of the action pursuant to s 4 of the Arbitration Act‚ 1889‚ and to refer the matters in dispute to arbitration in accordance with the terms of art 49‚ Held: (i) art 49 must be treated as a statutory agreement between the members and the association as well as between themselves
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Different approach taken by the Court of Appeal in Williams v Roffey was it fair or not? It is commonly accepted within the English Contract Law that the models of contractual fairness must exist in contractual disputes. Essential to these models is the doctrine of consideration and the principles that comes under the doctrine of consideration such as laws derived from both Williams v Roffey (1990) and Stilk v Myrick (1809). Starting with the development of the doctrine of consideration and the
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Peter James and Jenny Shorter are in business together designing and producing ladies hand-made clothing to order. They are based in Chelsea and trade under the name of J & S Fashions. They have not drawn up or signed any documents to form the business‚ or registered it with anyone. J & S Fashions has recently set up its own web page on the Internet‚ intending to gain customers that way and to expand. It has been suggested to Peter‚ by a friend in a pub‚ that it would make "sound business sense"
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r lwaCYBER LAW Cyber Laws are the basic laws of a Society and hence have implications on every aspect of the Cyber Society such as Governance‚ Business‚ Crimes‚ Entertainment‚ Information Delivery‚ Education etc. WHY THE NEED FOR CYBER LAW? • Coming of the Internet. • Greatest cultural‚ economic‚ political and social transformation in the history of human society. • Complex legal issues arising leading to the development of cyber law. • Different approaches for controlling‚ regulating and
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FOUNDATIONS OF BUSINESS LAW - ASSIGNMENT 1 DUE DATE: Week 4 INSTRUCTIONS TO STUDENTS All assignments must be submitted electronically using Turnitin by 9 pm Friday March 22. Please find out if you are also required to provide your teacher with a hard copy. This assignment comprises FOUR questions that are based on some of the information covered in the first two weeks of the course. All questions must be answered. The lecture notes are on the portal in Weeks 1 and 2. They include
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Part 1 A contract is an agreement between two or more parties‚ which can be legally enforceable. A contract maybe written or oral‚ although an oral agreement can be difficult to prove in court. In order for a contract to exist it must include four elements‚ that being offer‚ acceptance‚ intention and consideration. (Sweeney & O’Reilly 2007 pg 160). A contract only exists when an offer has been accepted‚ an offer has the intention to be legally binding and the willingness to contract on certain conditions
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payment that is a breach of condition. Therefore‚ the seller is entitled to repudiate the contract and sue for payment. In Hartley v Haymans [ 1902] 3 K. B. 475 the court was held that the time of delivery is a prima facie of the essence in commercial law. In Charles Rickards Ltd v Oenheim [ 1950] 1 K. B. 616 it was held that the notice had again made the time of essence. Section 61 of the SGA defines the delivery. In addition to‚ Yuippe requested Haks to make second delivery and would pay both instalments
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If Moore ’s law reaches the borders of technical feasibility - what comes next? “Technology is like a fish. The longer it stays on the shelf‚ the less desirable it becomes.” Andrew Heller In this fast hi-tech era‚ every one expects continuous technological progress but no one can predict hundred percent what comes next? When people think of the future period‚ they assume that the current rate of progress will be continued for future periods. But when the history of technology is assessed seriously
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Inertia (Law of Inertia) Name _____________________ Section _________ Date ______ The law of acceleration explains how a net force makes a mass accelerate. It shows how the magnitude of the acceleration depends on the magnitude of the force (directly proportional) and on the magnitude of the mass (inversely proportional). Acceleration happens only when there is an unbalanced force. Where All Forces Are Balanced No change of velocity occurs when the forces acting a body are balanced
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Case Study Of The Contracts Act 1950 situations‚ there are three different contracts made between Allan and the bus conductor‚ Allan and Sally and Allan and Abu. Allan was trying to trick or lie to the bus conductor‚ Sally and Abu. The issue for the case Allan and the bus conductor and Allan and Sally is whether there is a valid contract between the two parties. For the case Allan and Abu‚ the issue is whether Abu can avoid the contract or not. The bus conductor‚ Sally and Abu can get compensation
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