Home > Terms > English, UK (UE) > Objective theory of contract
Objective theory of contract
Modern (late 19th century) legal concept that a binding agreement exists between two (or more) parties if a reasonable person would judge (from the outward and objective acts of the parties and the associated circumstances) that an offer has been made and accepted. It dispenses with the subjective notion of intention ('meeting of minds') of the parties advocated under the older (early 19th century) subjective theory of contract as being too hazy.
This is auto-generated content. You can help to improve it.
0
0
Improve it
Other Languages:
Member comments
Terms in the News
Featured Terms
Industry/Domain: Language Category: Language visualizations
Word cloud
A visual representation of the frequency of occurence of certain words. The word cloud can be used to represent major search terms in search engines, ...
Contributor
Featured blossaries
Browers Terms By Category
- Social media(480)
- Internet(195)
- Search engines(29)
- Online games(22)
- Ecommerce(21)
- SEO(8)
Online services(770) Terms
- Aeronautics(5992)
- Air traffic control(1257)
- Airport(1242)
- Aircraft(949)
- Aircraft maintenance(888)
- Powerplant(616)
Aviation(12294) Terms
- General boating(783)
- Sailboat(137)
- Yacht(26)
Boat(946) Terms
- Wedding gowns(129)
- Wedding cake(34)
- Grooms(34)
- Wedding florals(25)
- Royal wedding(21)
- Honeymoons(5)