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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. A student in the midst of completing a study program when the school decides to disband the business department is within his or her legal right to sue for breach of contract. Inasmuch as "catalogues, course descriptions and other writings may be considered contracts" (Gregg, 2004), it is prudent to charge the school with failure to honor the agreement it made with the student. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCBizDamag.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of contract. Inasmuch as "catalogues, course descriptions and other writings may be considered contracts" (Gregg, 2004), it is prudent to charge the school with failure to honor the agreement
it made with the student. Many may not realize the extent to which the agreement to instruct students is as much a written contract as any other; that students might
be able to travel to another academic institute to complete their studies is inconsequential to the matter at hand: This particular school did not uphold its legal obligation to complete
the students studies. A contract is a legally binding agreement; however, in order for it to be legally binding, five specific elements must be addressed: making an offer; accepting
the offer; certainty of subject matter; intention to create legally binding obligations; and consideration (Wilson, 1996). Types of contracts include multilateral, bilateral and unilateral.
The ability for the student to substantiate this claim comes from the very nature of why legally binding contracts were created in the first place, dating back to
the nineteenth century when it was determined that two or more people who enter into an agreement automatically render that agreement as obligatory by virtue of the voluntary nature of
that agreement. Known as the will theory, its transformation into contemporary society has lost a great deal of strength that once existed solely between and among the involved parties;
today, contract laws have taken away much of the total freedom that inherently came with contracts entered into just a couple of centuries ago (Wilson, 1996).
Indeed, the school has entered into a legally binding contract with the student to enable him or her to complete the business degree with the existing department
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