An untruthful assertion by one of the parties about a material fact of the contract is: _______.


GENUINENESS OF ASSENT 4310-4315

���� A party who demonstrates that he or she did not genuinely assent to the terms of a contract may avoid the contract. Genuine assent may be lacking due to mistake, fraudulent misrepresentation, undue influence, or duress.

���� As was true with contracts entered into by persons lacking contractual capacity, contracts lacking genuine assent are voidable, not void.


MISTAKE 4314

���� Mistake: The parties entered into a contract with different understandings of one or more material fact(s) relating to the subject matter of the contract.

���� Unilateral Mistake: A mistake made by one of the contracting parties. Generally, a unilateral mistake will not excuse performance of the contract unless:

(1)�� the other party to the contract knew or should have known of the mistake; or

(2)�� the mistake is one of mathematics only.

���� Mutual Mistake of Fact: A mistake on the part of both contracting parties as to some material fact. In this case, either party may rescind.

���� Mutual Mistake of Value: If, however, the mutual mistake concerns the future market value or some quality of the object of the contract, the contract can normally be enforced by either party.


FRAUDULENT MISREPRESENTATION 4310

���� When an innocent party consents to a contract with fraudulent terms, he or she may usually avoid the contract, because he or she did not genuinely assent to the fraudulent terms.

���� Elements of Fraudulent Misrepresentation:

(1)�� A misrepresentation of material fact was made,

(2)�� with the intent to deceive,

(3)�� on which the innocent party justifiably relied

(4)�� resulting in injury to the innocent party.

���� Most courts do not require proof of an injury to the innocent party if the only remedy sought by the innocent party is rescission of the contract -- that is, returning the parties to their pre-contractual positions.

���� However, in order to recover damages, it is universally held that the innocent party must prove injury as a result of the misrepresentation.


TYPES OF MISREPRESENTATIONS

���� Predictions and Expressions of Opinion: Generally, these will not give rise to an actionable misrepresentation, unless the person making the statement has a particular expertise and knows or has reason to know that the listener intends to rely on the statement.

���� Misrepresentation by Conduct: The conduct of a party -�particularly a party�s concealment of some material fact from the other party -- will support a claim of misrepresentation.

���� Misrepresentation of Law: Generally, this will not support a misrepresentation claim, unless the speaker is a member of a profession that is commonly known to require greater knowledge of the law than possessed by the average citizen.

���� Misrepresentation by Silence: Generally, neither party to a contract has a duty to come forward and volunteer facts unless the other party asks. However, the common law recognizes exceptions where a duty to speak exists, for example, where there exists a serious defect or serious risk of injury. In addition, some statutes create duties to speak not otherwise present under common law.


INTENT AND RELIANCE

���� Scienter: A defendant acts with the intent to deceive if he:

(1)�� knows a statement to be false,

(2)�� makes a statement he reasonably believes to false,

(3)�� makes a statement recklessly, without regard to its truthfulness or falsity, or

(4)�� implies that a statement is made on the basis of information that he does not possess or on some other basis on which it is not, in fact, based.

���� Reliance: The plaintiff must have acted based on (although not necessarily solely based on) the defendant�s misrep�resentation. Moreover, in some jurisdictions, the plaintiff�s reliance on the misrepresentation must be reasonable.


OTHER MISREPRESENTATIONS

���� Innocent Misrepresentation: A statement made by a person, believing it to be true, that actually misrepresents some material fact.

>���� An innocent misrepresentation results, in essence, in a mutual mistake of fact. Therefore, the only remedy to an injured party is generally rescission of the contract.

���� Negligent Misrepresentation: An untrue statement made by a person believing it to be true who failed to exercise reasonable care in determining its truthfulness and/or failed to use the skill and competence required by her business or profession.


UNDUE INFLUENCE AND DURESS 4313

>���� Undue Influence arises from relationships in which one party can influence another party to the point of overcoming the influenced party�s free will.

���� The essential feature of undue influence is that the party being influenced does not, in reality, enter into the contract of his or her own free will.

>���� Duress: Forcing a party to enter into a contract because of the fear created by threats. While a party forced to enter into a contract under duress may choose to perform the contract, duress is grounds for cancellation, or rescission.


ADHESION CONTRACTS

���� Adhesion Contract: A contract written exclusively by one party (the �dominant� party, usually the seller or creditor) and presented to the other party (the �adhering� party, usually the buyer or borrower) on a �take-it-or-leave-it� basis, such that the adhering party has no opportunity to negotiate the terms of the contract.

���� To avoid enforcement of a contract based on adhesion, the adhering party must show that:

(1)the parties had substantially unequal bargaining positions and

(2)�� enforcement against the adhering party would be

manifestly unfair or oppressive.

Is an untruthful assertion by one of the parties about a material fact?

An untruthful assertion by one of the parties about that material fact; it prevents the parties from having the mental agreement necessary for a legal contract. Might call for a rescinding of a contract, even if the person making the false assertion was entirely innocent of any intentional deception.

Is a false statement about a fact material to an agreement that the person who made the statement believed to be true?

A misrepresentation is a false statement of a material fact made by one party which affects the other party's decision in agreeing to a contract.

What is the result of a contract in which both parties are wrong about a material fact of the contract?

A mutual mistake occurs when the parties to a contract are both mistaken about the same material fact within their contract. They are at cross-purposes. There is a meeting of the minds, but the parties are mistaken. Hence the contract is voidable.

Which of the following occurs when only one party enters a contract under a mistaken assumption?

A “unilateral mistake” is a mistaken belief that is held by only one of the parties, and is not shared by the other party to the contract. Simply put, a unilateral mistake occurs when only one of the parties misinterprets the subject matter or meaning of the terms that are contained in the contract agreement.