RemNote Community
Community

Core Principles of Consideration

Understand the definition, legal rules, and comparative perspectives of consideration in contract law.
Summary
Read Summary
Flashcards
Save Flashcards
Quiz
Take Quiz

Quick Practice

How is consideration defined in the context of a contract?
1 of 18

Summary

Understanding Consideration in Contract Law What Is Consideration? Consideration is the foundation of contract law in common law jurisdictions. At its core, consideration is the exchange of value between the parties to a contract—each party gives something of value in return for receiving something of value from the other party. More precisely: consideration is a promise of something of value given by one party (the promisor) in exchange for something of value given by the other party (the promisee). This mutual exchange is what transforms a promise into a binding contract. The Forms Consideration Can Take Consideration is flexible in form. It may consist of: Money (the most common form) Goods or services (anything tangible or an act performed) Forbearance (refraining from doing something you have the legal right to do) Detriment, loss, or responsibility (assuming an obligation or burden) The key insight is that consideration doesn't have to be physical or obvious—it simply needs to be something of value exchanged between parties. For example, a promise to stop smoking could constitute consideration if the promisor has a legal right to smoke that they are surrendering. The Mutual Exchange Requirement For a contract to be binding in common law jurisdictions, both parties must provide consideration. This is sometimes called the doctrine of mutuality of obligation. Consider this example: Party A promises to give Party B a car, and Party B promises to pay $20,000. Party A's consideration is the promise to deliver the car; Party B's consideration is the promise to pay. Each has given something valuable in exchange for the other's promise. By contrast, if Party A simply promises to give Party B a valuable painting for nothing in return, there is no mutual exchange. Party A is making a gift, not creating a binding contract. The contract lacks valid consideration and cannot be enforced. This requirement applies to all simple contracts in common law systems. Note that contracts executed by deed do not require consideration, though this is a narrow exception. What Happens When Consideration Is Missing? If a contract lacks valid consideration, it may be void and unenforceable. However, this doesn't always leave the aggrieved party without a remedy. Courts may apply alternative doctrines: Quantum meruit: A party may recover payment for services rendered based on the reasonable value of work performed, even without a binding contract Promissory estoppel: A party who relied on a promise may receive relief if allowing the promisor to withdraw the promise would cause unfair prejudice These remedies help prevent harsh outcomes, but they are not substitutes for finding valid consideration. Key Legal Rules on Consideration The Sufficiency vs. Adequacy Distinction This is a commonly misunderstood concept, so pay special attention. There is an important difference between two terms: Sufficiency: Whether consideration exists at all—is there a genuine exchange of value? Adequacy: Whether the values exchanged are roughly equal in monetary terms The law requires sufficiency but not adequacy. This means a court will enforce a contract where one party receives significantly more value than they give, as long as both parties gave something. A promise to pay $200 for an item worth $1,000 is still a valid contract—the disparity in value does not make the consideration inadequate. This rule respects freedom of contract: courts assume parties are capable of making their own deals, even bad ones. Part Payment of a Debt Does Not Provide Fresh Consideration Under English law, a mere part payment of a debt does not constitute valid consideration for releasing the full debt. This is a strict rule that frequently appears on exams. Example: Debtor owes Creditor $1,000. Debtor pays $500 and asks Creditor to forgive the remaining $500. Creditor agrees. However, if Creditor later sues for the remaining $500, the Debtor's part payment does not provide fresh consideration for the forgiveness. The Debtor was already obligated to pay $1,000, so paying $500 (part of that obligation) is not a new exchange of value. The reasoning: part payment is not consideration because the debtor is doing something they were already legally required to do. Consideration Must Move from the Promisee Consideration must move from the promisee—it must originate from the party who is receiving the promise. However, there is an important nuance: consideration need not flow directly to the promisor. Example: A promises to give B a gift if B donates money to charity. B's donation to the charity (the consideration) comes from B (the promisee), but it flows to the charity, not to A. This is still valid consideration because it moved from B, even though A is not the direct beneficiary. Illusory Consideration Is Invalid A promise that does not actually bind the promisor to any real performance is illusory and fails as consideration. If a party has the complete freedom to avoid performance, they have not truly given consideration. Example: "I promise to sell you my house if I feel like it." This is illusory because the promisor retains complete discretion and has made no binding commitment. Contrast this with: "I promise to sell you my house for $300,000 if you can obtain financing"—here, the promisor is bound (the condition about financing is outside their control). Past Consideration Cannot Support a Contract Consideration must be present or future—something given before the promise is made is "past consideration" and is invalid. Example: Tom helps his neighbor Sarah move house without being asked and without any promise of payment. A week later, Sarah promises to pay Tom $200 for the help. Tom cannot enforce this promise because his help was given before the promise; it is past consideration. The reasoning: there was no exchange at the time of the promise. Sarah made the promise out of gratitude, not as part of a bargain. Moral Consideration Is Insufficient Promises based solely on love, affection, or moral duty are not valid consideration. These are gratuitous promises, not contracts. Example: "I promise to pay for your education because I love you" lacks valid consideration. Similarly, a promise motivated by feeling obligated to support a family member is not enforceable as a contract (though it may be enforceable as a deed if properly executed). Existing Legal Duty Does Not Qualify as Fresh Consideration If you are already legally obligated to do something, promising to do that same thing does not constitute new consideration. Example 1: A police officer promises to investigate a crime in exchange for payment. The officer is already legally obligated to investigate crimes, so the promise provides no fresh consideration. Example 2: A contractor is hired to build a house for $100,000. Midway through, the contractor says they will only finish for $120,000. The contractor's promise to complete work they are already contractually bound to perform is not fresh consideration for the additional $20,000. This rule prevents opportunistic behavior where one party uses leverage to extract additional payment for work already promised. Specific Considerations Under Indian Contract Law The Indian Contract Act 1872 provides additional detailed rules on consideration that are crucial if studying this jurisdiction: The Desire of the Promisor Valid consideration must be performed at the desire or request of the promisor. Actions taken without such desire or request are not good consideration. Example: Tom helps Sarah move house without being asked. Even if Sarah later appreciates this and wants to pay Tom, the help does not constitute consideration because it was not done at Sarah's request. Who May Provide Consideration Importantly, consideration need not come from the promisee themselves. Under the Indian Contract Act, consideration may be supplied by the promisee or by any third party, as long as it ultimately benefits the promisee. This is broader than some other jurisdictions and allows contracts involving strangers to the immediate transaction. Consideration Must Have Real Value Consideration must be real, competent, and have some legal value. It cannot be based on impossible promises. Example: "I promise you $1,000 if you can jump over the moon" is not valid consideration because the act is impossible. The consideration must be something that can actually be performed. Forbidden Consideration Under the Indian Contract Act, consideration is invalid if it is: Prohibited by law Injurious to persons or property Immoral or fraudulent Contrary to public policy Restraining legal proceedings Involving public offices or titles Involving involuntary labor Inducing someone to marry Restricting personal liberty This is an important list to understand. The core principle is that consideration cannot be based on anything the law disapproves of. If one party promises to do something illegal or immoral, that promise cannot constitute valid consideration for a contract. Comparative Perspective: How Other Systems Handle Consideration Civil Law Jurisdictions Unlike common law systems, civil law jurisdictions do not require an exchange of valuable rights for a contract to be enforceable. A simple promise to give a gift can create binding obligations without consideration. This reflects a different philosophical approach to contracts—civil law systems focus on the intent to be bound, while common law systems focus on the bargain and exchange. International Commercial Law Major international commercial instruments have rejected the consideration requirement: The United Nations Principles of International Commercial Contracts The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods These instruments do not require consideration for contract validity, recognizing that international commerce often operates differently than the common law tradition assumes. <extrainfo> Nominal Consideration Some contracts cite a nominal sum, such as "$1" or "$10," as consideration. This practice raises the question: is a token sum sufficient consideration? Most courts accept nominal consideration as sufficient, even if the stated amount is far below the value being exchanged. The rationale follows the adequacy principle: courts do not inquire into whether consideration is fairly valued. However, a minority view holds that extremely nominal amounts (like "$1" when significant value is exchanged) may be a "sham" and not truly represent a bargain. This minority position is less favored in modern case law. </extrainfo> Summary of Key Principles As you prepare for your exam, remember these essential points: Consideration requires mutual exchange of value between parties Both parties must give consideration for the contract to be binding Sufficiency matters, not adequacy—courts enforce unequal bargains Common invalidating factors include: past consideration, moral obligation, existing duties, illusory promises, and part payment of debts Different jurisdictions have different rules—English law, Indian Contract Act, and civil law systems vary significantly Alternatives exist when consideration is missing: quantum meruit and promissory estoppel may still provide remedies Understanding consideration is essential because it is the dividing line between binding contracts and unenforceable promises.
Flashcards
How is consideration defined in the context of a contract?
A promise of something of value given by a promisor in exchange for something of value given by a promisee.
Under what condition is forbearance to act, such as a promise not to smoke, considered enforceable consideration?
Only when the promisor surrenders a legal right.
What is the legal consequence of a contract where one party promises to pay nothing for a valuable item?
It lacks valid consideration and is not enforceable as a contract.
In common law jurisdictions, what is required for a contract to be binding besides offer and acceptance?
Both parties must offer consideration.
Which specific type of legal instrument does not require consideration to be binding?
Contracts executed by deed.
Does the mere part payment of a debt satisfy the requirement for fresh consideration?
No, part payment of a debt is not good consideration.
According to the origin rules, from whom must consideration move?
The promisee (though it need not flow directly to the promisor).
What is the distinction between sufficiency and adequacy regarding consideration?
Consideration must be sufficient in law but need not be equal in monetary value to the promise.
Why is an "illusory" promise invalid as consideration?
Because it does not bind the promisor to any actual performance.
Why is "past consideration" generally unenforceable?
Because the act was performed before the promise was made.
Are promises based on love, affection, or moral duty considered valid consideration in simple contracts?
No, they are insufficient (moral consideration).
Does performing an act that one is already legally obligated to do count as fresh consideration?
No (Existing Legal Duty rule).
Under the Indian Contract Act 1872, at whose request or desire must consideration be performed?
At the desire of the promisor.
Under the Indian Contract Act 1872, who besides the promisee may provide consideration?
Any other person, including a stranger.
What is the rule regarding impossible promises as consideration under Indian Law?
They are not valid; consideration must be real, competent, and have legal value.
How do civil law jurisdictions differ from common law regarding the requirement of consideration?
They do not require an exchange of valuable rights; a simple promise to give a gift can be enforceable.
Which international instruments do not require consideration for contract validity?
United Nations Principles of International Commercial Contracts United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods
What is nominal consideration?
A symbolic sum, such as $1, cited as consideration to make a contract binding.

Quiz

In common law jurisdictions, what is required for a contract to be binding?
1 of 14
Key Concepts
Contract Consideration Principles
Consideration (law)
Promissory estoppel
Quantum meruit
Past consideration
Illusory consideration
Pre‑existing duty rule
Legal Frameworks
Deed (law)
Indian Contract Act 1872
Civil law contract
United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG)