a. a unilateral contract. | |
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b. a bilateral contract. | |
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c. a social contract. | |
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d. a moral obligation. | |
a. a moral obligation | |
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b. an ethical principle | |
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c. a promise | |
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d. a declaration | |
a. stand for “locus sigilli” and substitute for a seal. | |
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b. emphasize that the parties must sign with “legal signatures.” | |
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c. underscore that the parties’ deal must have “lawful significance.” | |
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d. remind the parties that they must have “legal status” to contract | |
a. void. | |
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b. voidable. | |
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c. valid. | |
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d. enforceable. | |
a. a quasi contract on which Allen can rely for employment. | |
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b. a bilateral contract that Allen accepted by applying for the job. | |
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c. a unilateral contract that Allen can accept by passing the exam. | |
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d. no contract. | |
a. neither party is released from it. | |
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b. both parties are released from it. | |
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c. only Carl is released from it. | |
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d. only Beth is released from it. | |
a. a quasi contract. | |
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b. an express contract. | |
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c. an implied-in-fact contract. | |
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d. an implied-in-law contract. | |
a. an offeree | |
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b. a promisor. | |
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c. an officer. | |
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d. a promisee. | |
a. Lou expected to be paid for providing services or property. | |
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b. Lou provided Mira with services or property. | |
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c. Mira failed to reject services or property provided by Lou. | |
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d. a court imposed a promise in the interest of fairness. | |
a. some forms of relief. | |
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b. any relief that a court wants to provide. | |
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c. any relief that a plaintiff wants to seek. | |
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d. any relief that a defendant wants to concede. | |
a. none of the above. | |
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b. terms that can be understood only by lawyers and judges. | |
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c. standardized terms. | |
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d. terms that are not negotiated separately. | |
a. a valid acceptance only. | |
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b. a valid offer only. | |
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c. a valid offer and a valid acceptance. | |
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d. neither a valid offer nor a valid acceptance. | |
a. avoid the unjust enrichment of one party at the expense of the other. | |
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b. reward the semi-contractual conduct of one party toward the other. | |
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c. sanction the non-contractual behavior of one party toward the other. | |
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d. punish the failure of one party to honor a moral obligation to the other. | |
a. what the defendant claims was the parties’ intent. | |
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b. what the parties now agree they intended. | |
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c. the parties’ intent as expressed in their contract. | |
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d. what the plaintiff claims was the parties’ intent. | |
a. Omega must suffer the loss because the policy predates the amendment. | |
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b. Omega must suffer the loss because the amendment meets the policy’s conditions. | |
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c. NIC must pay Omega because the amendment does not meet the policy’s conditions. | |
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d. NIC must pay Omega because the policy predates the amendment. | |
a. quasi contract. | |
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b. implied-in-fact contract. | |
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c. implied-in-law contract. | |
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d. express contract. | |
a. the terms may be express, implied, or a mix of both. | |
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b. all terms must be express. | |
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c. the terms may be express or implied, but not both. | |
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d. all terms must be implied. | |
a. under no circumstances. | |
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b. only if Bud was aware of the error. | |
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c. even if Bud was not aware of the error. | |
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d. only if Bud tried to conceal the error. | |
a. voidable. | |
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b. enforceable. | |
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c. unenforceable. | |
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d. void. | |
a. a promisor. | |
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b. a promisee. | |
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c. an officer. | |
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d. an offeree. | |