Comparative Contract Law 2200-1I008
The course is supposed to cover the following issues:
1. Introduction to the Course. An Overview of European Law & European Contract Law
2. Introduction to Contract Law: Terminology and Different Approaches
3. Contract Law Theory
4. Formation of Contract
5. Pre-contractual Duties and Negotiations
6. Defect of Consent
7. Incapacity, Illegality & Immorality of Contracts
8. Content of Contracts: Standard Terms, Unfair Clauses & Supplementation of Contracts
9. Interpretation (Construction) of Contracts
10. Supervening Events
11. Remedies for Breach of Contract: An Overview
Term 2023Z:
The course is supposed to cover the following issues: 1. Introduction to the Course. An Overview of European Law & European Contract Law 2. Introduction to Contract Law: Terminology and Different Approaches 3. Contract Law Theory 4. Formation of Contract 5. Pre-contractual Duties and Negotiations 6. Defect of Consent 7. Incapacity, Illegality & Immorality of Contracts 8. Content of Contracts: Standard Terms, Unfair Clauses & Supplementation of Contracts 9. Interpretation (Construction) of Contracts 10. Supervening Events 11. Remedies for Breach of Contract: An Overview |
Term 2024L:
The course is supposed to cover the following issues: 1. Introduction to the Course. An Overview of European Law & European Contract Law 2. Introduction to Contract Law: Terminology and Different Approaches 3. Contract Law Theory 4. Formation of Contract 5. Pre-contractual Duties and Negotiations 6. Defect of Consent 7. Incapacity, Illegality & Immorality of Contracts 8. Content of Contracts: Standard Terms, Unfair Clauses & Supplementation of Contracts 9. Interpretation (Construction) of Contracts 10. Supervening Events 11. Remedies for Breach of Contract: An Overview |
Prerequisites (description)
Course coordinators
Type of course
General: elective courses optional courses | Term 2024L: elective courses elective monographs optional courses | Term 2023Z: elective monographs elective courses optional courses |
Mode
Learning outcomes
After finishing this course a student should be able to:
KNOWLEDGE
- define fundamental comparative law terms and contract law terms,
- present basic rules in force in Germany, France and England on contract law,
- identify key similarities and differences between contract law in civil law jurisdictions and contract law in common law jurisdictions,
- compare the process of unification of contract law in Europe with global and American attempts to unify different areas of private law,
- compare rules on contract law from PECL and DCFR with national contract law
- discuss perspectives of further unification of contract law in the EU;
SKILLS
- apply comparative law method in practice,
- analyze pieces of legislation on contract law coming from different jurisdictions
- evaluate the usefulness of PECL and DCFR for drafting and concluding international contracts
- draft contracts under French, German, and English laws
Assessment criteria
Assessment will be on the basis of an essay (70%), performance in the class (20%), and attendance (10%).
The essay must be on a relevant topic of each student‘s choice, subject to approval by the course instructors.
Length: the essays should be 10-15 pages in length (Times New Roman 12- point front; 1,5 line spacing, default margin settings).
Structure: the paper should consist of the following sections:
Sec. 1: Identification of a research question
Sec. 2: English law approach
Sec. 3: French law approach
Sec. 4: German law approach
Sec. 5: A student’s national law approach
Sec. 6: Comparison of the national approaches discussed and conclusions
Essays should be sent electronically (file formats: doc, docx, pdf) to osajda@wpia.uw.edu.pl
The following criteria will apply to the assessment of essays submitted: accuracy and comprehensiveness of identification of the research problem, accuracy and comprehensiveness of information on national laws given in sections 2-5, skill in application of the comparative method (structure, comprehensiveness and conclusiveness of comparative argument and conclusions) formal correctness (formatting, citing and proper style of footnotes).
Attendance:
Students may miss two classes of the course without notifying the course instructors.
Practical placement
none
Bibliography
Textbook:
Beale, H. G., et al., Contract Law, 2. ed. (London: Hart, 2019)
Recommended additional textbook:
Smits J., Contract Law. A Comparative Introduction, Elgar Publishing 2017
Additional readings may be assigned for particular classes
Term 2023Z:
Textbook: Beale, H. G., et al., Contract Law, 2. ed. (London: Hart, 2019) Recommended additional textbook: Smits J., Contract Law. A Comparative Introduction, Elgar Publishing 2017 Additional readings may be assigned for particular classes |
Term 2024L:
Textbook: Beale, H. G., et al., Contract Law, 2. ed. (London: Hart, 2019) Recommended additional textbook: Smits J., Contract Law. A Comparative Introduction, Elgar Publishing 2017 Additional readings may be assigned for particular classes |
Notes
Term 2023Z:
none |
Term 2024L:
none |
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: