Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
All natural persons, as a general rule, have full contractual capacity.
The minor will then have full contractual capacity to conclude contract with regard to the business.
Contractual capacity refers to the ability of a party to enter into a legally binding contract.
If someone is an infant and therefore has reduced contractual capacity, that will tend to apply wherever they go.
The age at which children achieve full contractual capacity varies from state to state but the principle is always the same.
Both parties must have contractual capacity.
Persons with limited contractual capacity include minors.
Persons without any contractual capacity, such as infants, and some mental health care users and intoxicated persons, must be represented by their guardians or administrators.
A Common Law corporation (i.e. one created by Charter from the Crown) is, it is true, presumed to have the contractual capacity of an individual.
There must be contractual capacity and consensus, the agreement must be legal (not contrary to public policy), performance must be possible, and any formalities required by law must be complied with.
They also did not have authority over the children that they had during the marriage: "deprived her of all authority over her children and of any contractual capacity during his life" (Stone 592).
Up until this point, mobile phone services were exclusively offered on a postpaid basis (contract-based), which excluded individuals with poor credit ratings and minors under the age of 18 (the typical age of contractual capacity).
A void contract can be one in which any of the prerequisites of a valid contract is/are absent for example if there is no contractual capacity, the contract can be deemed as void.
All persons, whether natural or juristic, have passive legal capacity and can therefore bear rights and duties, but not all have contractual capacity, which enables persons to conclude the contracts by which those rights and duties are conferred.
By part I of the Law Reform (Married Women and Tortfeasors) Act 1935, a married woman was put into the same position as a man with respect to her proprietary and contractual capacity, and, except in relation to her husband, with respect to her liability for torts.