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photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
A contract is an agreement that specifies certain legally enforceable rights and obligations pertaining to two or more parties. A contract typically involves consent to transfer of goods, services, money, or promise to transfer any of those at a future date. The activities and intentions of the parties entering into a contract may be referred to as contracting. In the event of a breach of contract, the injured party may seek judicial remedies such as damages or equitable remedies such as specific performance or rescission. A binding agreement between actors in international law is known as a treaty. Contract law, the field of the law of obligations concerned with contracts, is based on the principle that agreements must be honoured. Like other areas of private law, contract law varies between jurisdictions. In general, contract law is exercised and governed either under common law jurisdictions, civil law jurisdictions, or mixed-law jurisdictions that combine elements of both common and civil law. Common law jurisdictions typically require contracts to include consideration in order to be valid, whereas civil and most mixed-law jurisdictions solely require a meeting of the minds between the parties. Within the overarching category of civil law jurisdictions, there are several distinct varieties of contract law with their own distinct criteria: the German tradition is characterised by the unique doctrine of abstraction, systems based on the Napoleonic Code are characterised by their systematic distinction between different types of contracts, and Roman-Dutch law is largely based on the writings of renaissance-era Dutch jurists and case law applying general principles of Roman law prior to the Netherlands' adoption of the Napoleonic Code. The UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts, published in 2016, aim to provide a general harmonised framework for international contracts, independent of the divergences between national laws, as well as a statement of common contractual principles for arbitrators and judges to apply where national laws are lacking. Notably, the Principles reject the doctrine of consideration, arguing that elimination of the doctrine "bring[s] about greater certainty and reduce litigation" in international trade. The Principles also rejected the abstraction principle on the grounds that it and similar doctrines are "not easily compatible with modern business perceptions and practice". Contract law can be contrasted with tort law (also referred to in some jurisdictions as the law of delicts), the other major area of the law of obligations. While tort law generally deals with private duties and obligations that exist by operation of law, and provide remedies for civil wrongs committed between individuals not in a pre-existing legal relationship, contract law provides for the creation and enforcement of duties and obligations through a prior agreement between parties. The emergence of quasi-contracts, quasi-torts, and quasi-delicts renders the boundary between tort and contract law somewhat uncertain. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about contract 212
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Law No. 108 of October 11, 1837
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Law No. 1041 of September 14, 1859
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Law No. 1252 of July 8, 1865
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Law No. 1349 of September 12, 1866
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Law No. 3326 of August 4, 1887
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Law No. 3349 of October 20, 1887
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Law No. 48 of June 7, 1892
The Squareness of Neil Morris
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Law No. 28 of February 15, 1935
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Law No. 49 of May 9, 1935
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Law No. 107 of October 26, 1935
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Law No. 417 of April 7, 1937
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Law No. 475 of August 17, 1937
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Law No. 404 of September 24, 1948
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Law No. 353 of August 28, 1948
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Law No. 482 of November 12, 1948
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Law No. 912 of November 10, 1949
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Law No. 771 of July 21, 1949
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Law No. 860 of October 13, 1949
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Law No. 694 of May 7, 1949
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Law No. 1154 of July 5, 1950
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Law No. 1378 of June 6, 1951
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Law No. 1537 of January 2, 1952
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Law No. 1768 of December 18, 1952
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Law No. 1785-d of December 29, 1952
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Law No. 1812 of February 4, 1953
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Law No. 2305 of August 30, 1954
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Law No. 2313 of September 3, 1954
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Law No. 2217 of June 5, 1954
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Law No. 2437 of March 7, 1955
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Law No. 3336 of December 10, 1957
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Law No. 3494 of December 19, 1958
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