you need actual communication of the acceptance so it needs to be delivered and readdissipate said:hmm sorry. the recipient of an acceptance. i have a situation where an acceptance was sent to the office of the offeror during office hours, but no one read it, and the offer was revoked shortly after. and i'm trying to find a case which supports the principle (?) that the message arrived during their office hours so they should have read it.
What you say is, with great respect, ridiculous! Especially the bit about "if they didnt read the acceptance; tough luck".mr EaZy said:you need actual communication of the acceptance so it needs to be delivered and read
if ur sending the offer by post- the postal rule would mean that the other party has read it the moment u've sent it in the mail.
if they didnt read the acceptance; tough luck
unless you actually found a case that says im wrong?
Yeah trueRorix said:What you say is, with great respect, ridiculous! Especially the bit about "if they didnt read the acceptance; tough luck".
The contract is made when the acceptance is postedRorix said:What you say is, with great respect, ridiculous! Especially the bit about "if they didnt read the acceptance; tough luck".
Yes, that's right.mr EaZy said:The contract is made when the acceptance is posted
so its irrelevant if you read the acceptance letter or not
in other words
if you didnt read the acceptance letter from the offeree: then tough luck - you cant claim ignorance to revoke an offer when the agreement was done
i think im right there- wats the ridiculous part about it?
"Thus, unless the offeree received the letter of revocation before posting an acceptance, a person who has accepted an offer not known to have been withdrawn may act on the basis that a contract binding on both parties has been formed"
Byrne & Co v Leon Van Tienhoven & Co (1880)
mr EaZy said:i think im right there- wats the ridiculous part about it?
Given the thread was about prompt handling of messages, I understood you as saying "you need actual communication of the acceptance so it needs to be delivered and read...if they didnt read the acceptance; tough luck", given most people if referring to the second would say "if it wasn't delivered" etc.you need actual communication of the acceptance so it needs to be delivered and read
if ur sending the offer by post- the postal rule would mean that the other party has read it the moment u've sent it in the mail.
if they didnt read the acceptance; tough luck