Consideration In contract law consideration is concerned with the bargain of the contract. A contract is based on an exchange of promises. Each party to a contract must be both a promisor and a promisee. They must each receive a benefit and each suffer a detriment. This benefit or detriment is referred to as consideration. Consideration must be something of value in the eyes of the law - (Thomas v Thomas). This excludes promises of love and affection‚ gaming and betting etc. A one sided promise
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LAW OF CONTRACT Subject Code : 101 TOPIC : VALUE OF INSUFFICIENCY OF CONSIDERATION IN CONTRACT PRESENTED BY : NAME : Siddharth Dalabehera ROLL : 1283092 COURSE : BA LLB (B) UNDER THE GUIDANCE OF : MS. Jinia Kundu and MR. P. K. Ghosh ACKNOWLEDGMENT I owe a great many thanks to a great many people who helped and supported me during
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1 (a) According to the information from the question‚ Hei Lau’s letter amounted to an offer to sell his second-hand car and the offer would remain open for one week. Although Chiu Chor made the first letter to Hei Lau for inquiring “whether he would take HK$40‚000 for the car”‚ the original offer was still valid because this inquiry was a mere request for information about the offer rather than a counter offer‚ it does not imply a rejection of the offer. An example of a mere request is the case
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Introduction Consideration is one of the essential elements for a formation of a contract.1 According to Lord Pollock’s definition of consideration which is an act or forbearance of one party‚ or the promise thereof‚ is the price for which the promise of the other is bought and the promise thus given for value is enforceable.2 Besides that‚ consideration must be something of value given or promised in exchange for the promise given by the other party in order for a valid contract to be formed.3
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Michael jhon Jacobe Sergeant at Arms Ms. Florie Milagrosa Muse Mr.Jaime Mose Escort Ms.Rosalie Bondocoy BSE Representative Mr. Jay Mercurio BEED Representative Mr. Charlie Mose ACS Representative Resolution No. 4 Series of 2012 RESOLUTION REQUESTING THE RMTU ADMINISTRATION TO RELEASE THE SUPREME GOVERNMENT STA. CRUZ CAMPUS (SSG-SC) FUND COLLECTED FROM THE STUDENTS FOR THE FIRST SEMESTER 2012-2013. WHEREAS: the RMTU Administration is requested to release the SSG
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BARANGAY RESOLUTION NO.______‚ S-2012 ------------------------------------------------- “A RESOLUTION NAMING THE UNDER CONSTRUCTION GYMNASIUM OF HAGDAN BATO LIBIS NEXT TO JOSELITO “JUN” TORRES.” WHEREAS‚ the late JOSELITO “JUN” TORRES served as a KABATAANG BARANGAY CHAIRMAN of Barangay Hagdan Bato Libis and KABATAANG BARANGAY FEDERATION PRESIDENT of Mandaluyong City‚ in 1985-1992; WHEREAS‚ the late JOSELITO “JUN” TORRES‚ a resident of Barangay Hagdan Bato Libis who had contributed a lot
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STUDENT GOVERNMENT (SSG) EXCERPT FROM THE MINUTES OF THE 10th REGULAR SESSION OF THE SUPREME STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICERS OF JULITA NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL‚ JULITA‚ LEYTE HELD AT THE SCHOOL LIBRARY ON SEPTEMBER 7‚2012 AT 3:00 PM. Present officers: RESOLUTION REQUESTING FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FROM AN WARAY PARTYLIST THROUGH HON. BEN NOEL FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE SUPREME STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE OF JULITA NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL ‚ JULITA ‚ LEYTE. WHEREAS ‚ it lays the groundwork for good governance
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Introduction Augmented reality (AR) is a term for a live direct or indirect view of a physical‚ real-world environment whose elements are augmented by computer-generated sensory input such as sound‚ video‚ graphics or GPS data. It is related to a more general concept called mediated reality‚ in which a view of reality is modified (possibly even diminished rather than augmented) by a computer. As a result‚ the technology functions by enhancing one’s current perception of reality. By contrast‚ virtual
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Fundamental Principles of HCI Design Introduction I will be describing the principles of HCI and Interface Design‚ giving examples of each of them in use. I will also be talking about perception (including colour‚ luminance‚ Pattern‚ Pop Out Effect and Gestalt Laws)‚ behaviour models (including Predictive Modelling‚ KLM‚ throughput and Fitts Law‚ descriptive modelling (including KAM‚ Buxton’s model and Guiard’s model) and Schneiderman’s 8 Golden Rules. Schneiderman’s 8 Golden Rules Eight
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has been set. While world is where the goal is trying to be achieved in. The evaluation part takes the results from the execution and interprets them to see if the goal that was set was achieved. The Abowd and Beale interaction framework (IF) includes the communication between the system and the user through the interface (Helm‚ 2008). It consists of four parts‚ system‚ user‚ input‚ and output. The user inputs into the interface‚ this is called an input language. The system then translates the
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