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Business law
Material
Introduction
Business law is a body of rules (laws) which govern
business and commercial activities (in particular, it
regulates law of person, contract, agency, business
organizations/partnerships);
A branch of civil law;
Consists both public and private law issues;
 Hence, every business professionals should be aware
of the legal environment that regulates the business
activities he/she is operating;
Ch-I: Introduction to Law
1) Meaning of Law:
 No consensus in defining the term “law”;
 Different scholars have tried to define law differently;
 For Instance:
The Greek philosopher Aristotle thought of law as a
“pledge that citizens of a state will do justice to
one another”. Aristotle defined “law” as “ a
rule of Conduct”;
 Aristotle’s student, Plato, asserted that law was
“a form of social control”;
Cont’d…
 Cicero, a Roman philosopher, believed law
was “the agreement of reason and nature, the
distinction between the just and the unjust”;
The British legal scholar Sir William
Blackstone described law as “a rule of civil
conduct prescribed by the supreme power in a
state, commanding what is right and
prohibiting what is wrong”;
Cont’d…
 The famous US Supreme Court Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes on his part contended that law
was a set of rules that allowed one to predict how a
court would resolve a particular dispute – “the
prophesies of what the courts will do in fact and
nothing more pretentious …”;
Though business law is defined in similar way,
business law, in its special nature, regulates the
relationship between individuals with one another
as they affect economic order;
Law may be permissive or prohibitive, and the same is
true for business law;
Cont’d
2) Features of Law:
i) Generality
The most obvious feature of law is its generality;
 Law is a general statement regarding a possible
human conduct;
 Any valid legal norm is applicable to all the subjects
in the author’s territory;
 Law is not meant to shape the behavior of a certain
category of persons and leave others; every one is
subject to the application of any duly existed law,
saving extremely exceptional circumstances (such as
exemption from legal liability to a certain degree
Cont’d…
 For instance, a law passed by the Ethiopian legislator
(the House of Peoples’ Representatives) demands all
Ethiopians to comply with it, irrespective of race,
language, religion, social status, sex and political
outlook;
 The generality of laws also implies that a law is
applicable to all similar cases, and it does not leave
others and govern some;
ii) Normativity
One of the distinctive features of law is that it is a
normative statement;
 This accords with the philosophical discourse on the
dichotomy between the “is” and the “ought”;
Cont’d…
The characterization of law as a normative statement
refers to the “ought” aspect of the discourse, the
statement of what should be rather than what is;
 Law is not a factual statement (description is not in
the nature of law); it is rather a prescriptive tool which
purports to shape human behavior in the future;
iii) Establishment in Permanence
The coming into force of law presupposes, at least
presumably, its indefinite existence in the future;
Cont’d…
 It is unusual to fix a time-limit for the application of
law;
 A frequently changing law creates social instability
and more prone to losing legitimacy;
 This does not mean, however, that laws live forever;
They have to be reasonably flexible to accommodate
changing social realities;
Change in societal circumstances is normally a
gradual process and the corollary gradual remolding
of laws cannot be regarded as resulting in an unstable
phenomenon;
Cont’d…
Laws violate the virtue of permanence and create
instability when they change quickly and
unnecessarily without having regard to the status of
the situation it is meant to govern;
 Law might exist exceptionally for temporary
application;
The possibility of the declaration of sate of emergency
(e.g. six months-Art.93(3) of FDRE Constitution)
explains such a circumstance;
 The law declaring the emergency situation remains in
force until the matter that called for the declaration of
emergency secedes;
Cont’d…
But overall, law is to be established in permanence
and a time frame would be fixed only in exceptional
circumstances;
iv) Intimacy with Human Behavior and State
Law is a social norm and its ultimate concern is
regulation of the social behavior of human beings;
 The claim of law would naturally be made by men
with respect to or as against each other;
 Law cannot be employed to govern relationships of
other animate or inanimate things as among
themselves; it is not concerned with a claim between
humans and other things either;
Cont’d…
 The intimacy of the law and the state is far from
question;
 In reality, one cannot conceive of one without the
other (they are two inseparable aspects of the same
system);
One cannot have validity or legitimacy without the
other;
Indeed, the state is itself brought into life by law and
cannot continue in that status without using law;
The law on the other hand would have life and
produce the desired effects only by the backing of
centrally organized state machinery;
Cont’d…
v) Strongly Institutionalized
We have said above that law is backed by an
established system of a state;
 The state is known for its strong institutionalization
and this provides the law with institutionalized
system of enforcement;
 The state is constituted by centrally established
institutions of legislature, executive and judiciary
entrusted with the tasks of law making, law
enforcement and interpretation of laws respectively;
 The combined operation of these organs sanctions
the law by a strong force;
Cont’d…
3) Law Vs Other Social Norms
 Law is a social norm, but not the only one;
 There are also other values of normative significance
in a society;
This “other social norms” category is filled perhaps
by ethics or morality, culture, religion, and the like;
These ethical/moral, or religious values are normative
in the sense that they, just like law, prescribe what
should be and what should not be and accordingly
shape the social behavior of man;
 To this extent, law possesses an identical attribute to
that of ethics, morality or religion;
Cont’d…
Nevertheless, there are conspicuous differences
between law and other social norms;
Firstly, One important issue that differentiates law
from the other social norms is mechanism of their
enforcement;
 Law is backed by a strong sanction of the state and
would be institutionally enforced;
Ethical/moral/religious norms on the other hand lack
such external and effective enforcement mechanism;
Their observance is more often than not demanded in
point of conscience than through external organ;
Cont’d…
 Individuals can breach these norms with impunity
and the most they would suffer is moral guilt;
Secondly, scope of application is a distinguishing
mark between law and the “other social norm”
category;
 Law enjoys uniform and nationwide application;
 But the other social norms are peculiar to particular
groups and therefore suffer from extremely localized
(restricted) application;
 There could be a number of religions, cultures or
customary practices in a state; none of them would
have norms that apply beyond their own peculiarities;
Cont’d…
Thirdly, law can still be identified vis-à-vis other
normative values of the society on the basis of the
mechanism by which it is created and changed;
 Law originates from a centrally established and
clearly defined institutional framework;
The existence of clear institutionalized system would
make it easy to bring law into effect and to amend it;
Non-legal norms, on the other hand, do not normally
have an easily traceable institutional origin for they
are not made in an organized way;
Cont’d…
They come into existence through a practice by a
concerned group over a relatively longer time in a
scattered and uncentralized manner;
 The development of these non-legal norms out of
unclear and gradual process makes it equally difficult
to amend them;
 They are not amenable to easy and fast amendment
for they are rigidly established;
 Fourthly, a further important factor that can be
regarded as a virtue of law over non-legal norms is
the exhaustiveness and clarity embedded in law;
Cont’d…
Law would be exhaustively proclaimed (mostly
written) and sufficiently clear;
 The conduct it purports to command or prohibit and
the consequences of behaving otherwise would be
fixed in advance;
 Normative rules of ethics, morality, or religion are,
on the other hand, barely exhaustive and known for
their manifest lack of clarity;
 And mostly non-legal norms do not determine the
consequences of breach in advance;
 Since they are mostly unwritten, they are surrounded
by a cloud of vagueness and obscurity;
Cont’d
4) Functions of Law
Law fundamentally maintains peace and security
in the society;
It is also important to note that law delves into
almost every social interaction. It regulates the way
a particular relationship is to be created,
maintained and broken. It steps into govern
detailed individual interactions. Laws of family for
instance are concerned with the regulation of the
institution of marriage and matrimonial affairs.
Cont’d…
 Contract and property laws administer
contractual bonds and property relationships of
individuals respectively. Business laws, on the
other hand, intend to shape behavior in
commercial transactions and ensure the
interaction is conducted in healthy and effective
manner;
 Law protects citizens from arbitrary and
excessive governmental actions. That body of law
which sets out structure of the state and the
relationship the government of that state would
have with citizens is referred to as constitutional
law;
Cont’d…
 The powers and functions of the government are
usually defined by a constitution, and this law
restrains undue governmental encroachment in the
affairs of subjects. Human rights provisions are typical
examples in this regard–that they call upon the
government to either act or refrain from acting in the
protection and enforcement of human rights;
Law of constitution can function in such a way that
the various organs constituting the government
discharge their tasks in an atmosphere of harmony
and transparency;
Cont’d…
The principle of checks and balances incorporated
into most republican constitutions reveals the
possibility of review of actions or decisions of the
legislative, executive or judicial bodies by one
another;
Laws are also instrumental in fighting harmful
traditional practices (HTPs). Early marriage has been
the widespread practice in many parts of Ethiopia.
Marriage is a big affair upon which family, the
fundamental unit of the society, is found. Yet, such
purpose is served only if spouses are psychologically
and biologically matured enough;
Cont’d…
Ignorant of such fact, most Ethiopian parents force
their teenage children (especially girls) to marry
while they are in fragile mental and physical
conditions, exposing them to various economic,
social and biological problems;
The same is true of Female Genital Mutilation
(FGM). The law is a typical tool in reducing, and
ultimately eradicating, these harmful traditional
practices;
 Law also plays a prominent role in improving the life
of the society through the encouragement of
innovation and creativity;
Cont’d…
Law encourages individuals to engage in innovative
tasks by granting them rights to exclusive enjoyment
of their inventions via issuing patents, copyrights,
trademarks and the like. These mechanisms bestow
inventors and authors of new ideas with economic
and moral benefits, thereby helping society to make
use of better means of life;
Cont’d…
5) Classifications of Law
 The body of law is huge. To study it one must break
it down by means of classification;
 Classification of laws is the systematization of the
law based on the subject matter for the purpose of
finding the relevant law more easily and
determining whether different legal rules were
required depending on their area of application;
 No single classification system can cover the large
mass of legal information. Consequently, those
systems that have been devised tend to overlap;
Cont’d…
The best known classifications of law follows are as
follows:
1) Public Vs Private Law
Public law addresses the relationship between
persons and their government, and between various
governments. They are public in the sense that the
interest of the public at large is at stake as
represented by the government. Criminal law and
constitutional law, for example, are generally
classified as public law, because they deal with
persons and their relationships to government;
Cont’d…
Criminal acts, though they may involve only one
victim, are seen as offenses against the society as a
whole and prohibited by governments for the
purposes of protecting the public. Constitutional law
is a public law because it involves question of
whether the government (federal, state or local in a
federal setting, or the central government in a unitary
system) has the power to act in a particular fashion;
Private law governs direct dealings between persons.
When persons deal or affect other persons, such as in
a contractual relationship, the law governing these
relationships is classified as private law;
Cont’d…
Private law may ultimately advance societal interests
as a whole, but its immediate concern is with
individual transactions that affect the legal positions
of the transacting persons. Agency, law of
commercial paper, trade and business organizations,
sales, torts, insurance and any other area of business
law is essentially classified as private law
2) Substantive Vs Procedural Law
Substantive law includes all laws that define,
describe, regulate and create legal rights and
obligations;
Cont’d…
This body of law establishes acts and situations
producing effect at law. For instance, a rule stating
that promises are enforced only when each party has
received something of value from the other party is
part of substantive law.
So, too, is a rule stating that a person who has injured
another through negligence must pay damages. Most
of the bodies of law we have highlighted above, both
public and private, are substantive laws. Substantive
law tells us what our rights are;
Procedural law sets out the methods of enforcing the
rights established by substantive law;
Cont’d…
 Questions about how a lawsuit should begin, what
documents need to be filed, which court will hear the
suit, which witnesses can be called, how the judicial
proceedings is conducted, and so on are all questions
of procedural law;
 In brief procedural law tells us how to exercise
substantive rights. Civil procedure, criminal
procedure and evidence are typical examples;
3) Civil Vs Criminal Law
Civil law is concerned with the duties that exist between
persons or between citizens and their government (the
latter as an ordinary legal person), excluding the duty
not to commit crimes;
Cont’d…
Contract law, for example, is part of civil law. The
whole body of tort law, which has to do with the
infringement, in the absence of contract, by the
person of the legally recognized rights of another is
an area of civil law;
Criminal law, in contrast to civil law, is concerned
with wrongs committed against the public as a whole.
Criminal law is always public where as civil law is
sometimes public and sometimes private. In a
criminal case, the government seeks to impose a
penalty on an allegedly guilty person;
1.3. Making and Highrarchy of laws
 In most of the Country the Law making organ is the le
gislative body of the government but the executive bra
nch may be delegated to make a law that needs detail e
xpertise.
 In Ethiopian context, the constitution provides that th
e peoples of Ethiopia through their representative ado
pted the constitution. The law making body is the Parl
iament/legislative body/.This body also ratify internati
onal treaties.
 The law enacted by such body may called proclamatio
n or code or else other.
 The Parliament may delegate the executive branch/Co
uncil of Ministers/ to enact Regulation based on the pr
oclamation. This in turn may delegate a certain Minist
ry to enact Directives which flows out of the Proclamat
ion and Regulation.
 Most of the time, the Hierarchy of Laws from Superior
to lower or top to bottom are the Constitution,Proclam
aion,Regulation and Directives.
 But, if the international treaties are about fundamenta
l human rights and freedoms, the constitution comes
next to such ratified laws.
 If there is a conflict in between or among such laws, th
e law or laws at the higher level shall prevail over.
CHAPTER TWO LAW OF PERSON
Personality is a fundamental concept in law because
no dealings of legal significance would produce effects
without it;
 It answers the basic question who the subjects of the
law are;
 Only subjects of the law can enjoy the rights that the
law confers upon them and only they can discharge
the duties it imposes upon them;
 Thus, the normal effect of personality is the ability to
be a party to legal transactions and perform various
juridical acts (acts having effect at law) having effect
of law;
Cont’d…
Personality is granted to two categories of beings and
accordingly is of types;
 One is physical or natural personality that is possessed
by human beings;
 In the past, not all human beings were subjects of the
law;
 For instance, slaves were regarded as mere chattels of
their masters and did not have any rights or duties of
their own;
 They were objects of legal transactions rather than
subjects of the law;
 So, during those times, personality was conferred upon
non-slaves;
 But these days, with the abolition of slavery and its strict
prohibition, virtually all human beings possess
personality and perform juridical acts;
Cont’d…
The other type of personality is that accorded to
beings that do not have material existence;
Associations, companies, organizations,
partnerships, corporations or even the state are only
perceived by the law to exist;
These fictitious entities are exclusive innovations of
the law and accordingly given personality because of
the necessities of modern complex legal transactions;
1) Beginning and Termination of Artificial
Personality:
 There could be numerous mechanisms through
which moral persons will begin to have legal life;
Cont’d…
 Of these mechanisms, the famous ones are
issuance of a specific legislation, effecting
registration and requirements of publicity;
 For instance, public enterprises will start to have
p e r s o n a l i t y u p o n t h e e n a c t m e n t o f
establishment regulations with no other
conditions attached to it;
 On the other hand, private business
organizations need to be registered with a
competent public authority in order to acquire
legal personality;
 They should also comply with publicity
requirements;
Cont’d…
 So, acquisition of personality by business
organizations is realized by meeting the
requirements of both registration and publicity,
and only as a consequence of such they can validly
undertake acts of civil life;
 Just like artificial personality commences through
issuance of statutes or effecting registration and
publicity, it ends through the enactment of
dissolving law or the striking out of the name of
the entity from the public registry;
Cont’d…
 To terminate the legal personality of a public
enterprise, regulations would be issued and
these would serve the purpose of ending the
legal life of the enterprise;
 Ordinary business organizations would cease
to have legal life when they are canceled from
the registry and/or through the revocation of
the license issued to them as evidence of
personality;
Cont’d…
 Artificial personality may also end as a matter of
fact where the object for which the entity is
established becomes impossible to achieve or
where that organization is dissolved because of
bankruptcy;
 In all above cases, the fictitious beings would die
out and they can no more be parties to
transactions having effect at law;
 Any act done by these beings after their
personality has terminated is deemed never to
have happened for all legal purposes;
Cont’d…
2) Attributes of Legal Personality
Being recognized as a person by the law makes the
person possess certain attributes;
 The most noticeable of these attributes are:
i) Having a name: -
 It may be very simple to coin a name and call a
certain being by that;
 But names do really affect the legal position of a
person because they are mechanisms of identifying
the civil identity of a specific person in the society
and of legally conferring/imposing upon it powers
and disabilities;
Cont’d…
Furthermore, since use of a name can modify the
legal status of a person, the law provides for
protective mechanisms against abuse and usurpation
of the name by others;
Generally, it is through name as a manifestation of
civil identity that a person in the eyes of the law can
become a party to a legal transaction, and thus it is a
fundamental attribute of personality;
ii)To sue and be sued (in one's name):-
 To sue is to bring a legal action against another, and,
conversely, to be sued is to face a legal action
brought against oneself by another;
Cont’d…
 In both cases, one attends a law court where
rights and duties are often modified through
judgments;
 Because they involve alteration of one's legal
position and determination of liability, suits
should be brought by and against the concerned
person in its own name;
For instance, if three people (A, B and C) form a
company and the latter has satisfied the
requirements of law for the acquisition of
personality, it brings legal actions against others
in the name of the company and not in the name
of the owners;
Cont’d…
 Similarly, others institute a legal action against
the company in the name of the company and
not in the name of A, B, or C (the owners);
Thus, a distinction is drawn between the
liability of the company and the individual
persons forming it;
iii)Entering into contractual relations: -
 Since a legal person is an entity that can be a
party to legal transactions, it can enter into
various contracts in its own name;
Cont’d…
 A company can conclude a contract with another
company or with a human being, and the rights
acquired as well as the liabilities incurred because
of the contract belong to the company itself, and
not to the owners;
 It is this legal person itself that is either the
creditor or the debtor of a third party contractant;
iv) Ownership and administration of property: -
 A legal person can exercise all property rights to
the exclusion of others and enjoys ownership and
administration right over all chattels belonging to
it;
Cont’d…
 Property belonging to a legal person is distinct
from the property of its owners, i.e. they belong to
essentially different patrimonies;
v) Obligation to pay taxes: -
 A legal person is liable to pay taxes on taxable
benefits and gains;
 Since it is authorized to own and administer
property and since it can carry on business, a legal
person pays taxes on its property and income in
the same way human beings do;
Cont’d…
 While it is generally true that fictitious beings
possess all the above features on their own behalf,
there are also some other points we need to take
note of here;
We know that moral or juridical persons do not
have a physical existence, and so they are without
the natural faculties of thinking, deciding or
moving;
 That means they necessarily undertake through
human agents when they carry out the above
affairs:
 They use human mind and decision when
they coin the name by which they are
Cont’d…
 they bring suits and defend same being
represented by human beings;
 it is again human agents that exercise property
ownership and administration, and sign a
contract on the behalf of the legal person;
 But, all such acts performed by the human agent
through representation are deemed to have been
directly undertaken by the legal person, and the
rights and duties arising therefrom would bind the
legal person and not the human agent;
Cont’d…
Individuals only facilitate transactions and they
then step-out of the legal consequences;
The conferring of personality upon moral persons
and accordingly authorizing them to own property
and conduct business in their own name give rise
to the concept of limited liability;
The fact that the property and patrimony of the
legal person is distinct from that of its owners
means that the legal person is liable to the extent
of its property only;
T h e l i a b i l i t y d o e s n o t e x te n d to t h e
property/patrimony of the owners;
Cont’d…
3) Commencement of Physical Personality
Principle:
Most legal systems accept birth as a time when
personality of a human being begins;
 Similarly, Art.1 of the Ethiopian Civil Code
provides “the human person is the subject of
rights from its birth…”;
 Birth refers to the complete extrusion of the baby
from its mother's womb either in a natural way or
by a medical operation;
 In this sense, the beginnings of natural and legal
existence are simultaneous;
Cont’d…
Birth alone is a sufficient condition to confer
personality under the Ethiopian law, and no other
requirements are attached to it;
Exception:
 Because personality begins at birth as a matter of
principle, an unborn body is not a person in the eyes of
the law and can have no rights;
 But this general rule is excepted in that personality
may be granted to a merely conceived baby without
waiting for its birth for some purposes;
 As an exception, personality of a fetus should be
restrictively construed and it is applicable only in
certain circumstances;
Cont’d…
The circumstance generally revolves around the
interest of the unborn child;
 The law has invented this fiction only for the
purpose of enabling the child (if it is born) to take
a benefit in all matters affecting its interest;
 This conception is based on the justification that a
child who has already lost its father while being in
its mother's womb should not be subjected to
further pain of losing a benefit which it would have
secured had it been born before its father's death;
Cont’d…
So, when there is an interest of the baby at stake,
the unborn baby in the womb should be regarded
as already born and should be allowed to take
advantage of the interest;
 The granting of personality to a fetus is subject to
compliance with three cumulative requirements;
According to Art 2 of the Ethiopian Civil Code,
“a child merely conceived is considered as
though born where its interest so requires
provided it is born alive and viable”;
 Thus, the three conditions are: the interest of the
child must justify the grant of personality, the
child must be born alive, and it must be viable;
Cont’d…
These conditions are cumulative in the sense that
the missing of one suffices to deny the fetus
personality;
In most cases, the interest of the unborn baby
comes into the fore where a father dies before the
birth of the child leaving behind property;
 If a baby has to wait until birth to acquire
personality, i.e. if Art 1 of the Civil Code is strictly
applied, it will definitely lose the succession to its
father's property because succession constitutes a
juristic act and being a beneficiary when it opens
necessarily requires personality;
Cont’d…
 Opening of succession is legally made at the
death of the father and the property would
devolve upon those having the capacity and the
right to succeed at such time;
 It is to be noted here that the merely conceived
baby will be given personality (before birth) only
for the purpose of the particular interest that
called for the personality;
 That means an unborn child would be recognized
as person only to benefit from the interest at hand,
and it has to wait until birth to acquire personality
for all other juridical acts;
Cont’d…
 Acquisition of personality for a particular interest
does not entitle one to exercise it across the board,
and in effect personality at conception is
significantly reduced;
Besides the interest of the child, there remain two
conditions: alive birth and viability;
 In order to be considered as a person, the baby
must be born alive so much so that, for instance,
personality will never be granted if the fetus is
legally aborted;
 Viability refers to the ability to live or the
potential of surviving;
Cont’d…
This is to exclude from the ambit of personality
impotent newly born babies or those incapable of
surviving because of some congenital factors;
The law takes certain presumptions to settle
questions of what baby is viable and what is not;
 The law irrebutably presumes that a child that
lives for 48 hours after its birth is viable, so that no
contrary evidence can be admitted to disprove this
presumption;
 The law also provides for another presumption in
the negative that a child that dies before 48 hours
after its birth is deemed to be not viable (Art. 4 of
the civil code);
Cont’d…
But this presumption is rebuttable in that it can be
shown to the contrary by proving the child was
viable;
 But we cannot challenge the non-viability of the
child by using deficiency in constitution as
evidence;
 That is to say, if a child dies before 48 hours
following its birth due to a disease he caught in its
mother's womb or due to other congenital
biological deficiencies, it will be conclusively
deemed not viable;
Cont’d…
However, external factors that may have caused
the death of the child before 48 hours can be used
to disprove the presumption of non-viability;
 If, for instance, the baby dies on the 43rd hour
after its birth because of mishandling by nurses or
by hunger or due to a car accident that occurred
while it was being taken home from hospital, all
such can be employed to challenge the above
presumption by proving that the baby would not
have died had it not been for the extraneous
factors..
Cont’d…
4) Capacity and Incapacity of Physical Persons
Capacity is a natural consequence of being
recognized as a person before the law and it refers
to the authority to enjoy and exercise rights and
duties by oneself;
 However, even if personality is a necessary
condition for capacity, it is not a sufficient one to
enable one to personally carry out juridical acts and
certain conditions may incapacitate an individual
still possessing personality;
 Capacity or incapacity is usually thought of
regarding two aspects—holding rights and duties,
and exercising rights and duties;
Cont’d…
The principle governing the holding of rights and
duties by physical person is that as soon as
personality begins all rights and duties are held by
an individual;
 This means that as far as the holding or enjoyment
of rights is concerned, capacity is not only the rule
but an absolute rule;
 It can be inferred from Art. 1 of the Civil Code that
entitlement to rights and duties under the civil law
belongs to all individuals by the fact of birth
without any other condition attached to such
holding;
Cont’d…
Capacity is the rule even in the case of exercising
rights and duties a physical person holds;
 Since holding rights and duties is meaningless
without the authority to exercise same, the full
exercise of rights and duties in principle coincides
with their holding;
 In the same way that all physical persons enjoy
rights and duties, they are capable of exercising
the same by themselves;
 But in certain circumstances it deems compelling,
the law may explicitly declare that person is
considered incapable to exercise rights and duties;
Cont’d…
Since capacity is presumed in the exercise of
rights and duties (incapacity is very exceptional),
the burden of proving the existence of
incapacity falls on the party who claims the
incapacity;
 Thus, in all acts of civil life physical persons
may be assumed that they are dealing with
equals who not only hold but also exercise the
same rights and duties as theirs;
Cont’d…
A physical person may be exceptionally enjoined
from personally exercising rights and duties because
of existence of certain conditions expressly
recognized by the law;
 But even in such case, the prohibition is not total, i.e.
the person is not prohibited from exercising rights
and duties altogether but only his personal exercise is
disallowed;
He or she can still exercise rights and duties through
another person by way of representation;
 So, the effect of incapacity in exercising rights and
duties is that the exercise would be entrusted to a
third person;
Cont’d…
Let’s now see in brief the legally prescribed
conditions of incapacity and their corresponding
representation institutions;
 Some of the conditions are protective of the interests
of the incapable person (e.g. minority, judicial
interdiction) while others are either preventive or
punitive of certain conduct (e.g. foreign citizenship,
legal interdiction);
a) Minority: -
Minority in civil law is an incapacitating condition that
occurs because of age;
A person below the age of 18 years is called a minor and is
incapable of exercising rights and duties by him/herself;
Cont’d…
The law intends that these persons have immature
intellectual faculty and lack the proper degree of
appreciation when they transact acts of civil life;
The law interferes to protect minors from exploitation
by others;
Accordingly, any civil act undertaken by the minor
without authority is subject to invalidation;
A minor may, however, validly perform acts of daily
life, i.e. simple and small matters that are quite
frequently done and that do not significantly affect
the legal position of the minor;
There are two institutions of representation
recognized by the law to exercise rights and duties on
Cont’d…
One is guardianship, which is entrusted with the task of
running the personality affairs of the minor;
 Personality interests include food, clothing, shelter, and
schooling, and generally refer to the proper physical and
psychological well being and growth of the minor;
The guardian is responsible for such interests of the child.
The other representative institution is the office of
tutorship;
Tutor is answerable for the protection and management of
the minor's economic (pecuniary) interests such as
securing income, investing same, running business,
administering property and the like;
Cont’d…
 Tutor is answerable for the protection and
management of the minor's economic (pecuniary)
interests such as securing income, investing same,
running business, administering property and the
like;
The incapacity arising as a result of minority may
terminate through a couple of ways;
 A minor obviously assumes capacity to exercise
rights and duties him/herself when he/she attains the
age of majority (18 years);
The incapacity of a minor may also come to an end
through emancipation even if the person is still below
the age of eighteen;
Cont’d…
A minor may conclude marriage in exceptional
circumstances approved by the appropriate public
body, and we call this situation emancipation;
This phenomenon suffices to end the incapacity of
the minor and releases him/her from the authorities
of the guardian and the tutor;
b) Judicial Interdiction: -
 This is a court judgment that declares a person as
incapable because of mental conditions;
 The law steps in to protect the interests of persons
with deteriorated mental functioning as a
consequence of insanity, infirmity, senility and the
like;
Cont’d…
Insane persons are believed to be unable to
understand the nature and consequences of their
actions because they have got a mental disease;
 Infirm persons are those with serious physical
deformities so that such deformities will have the
ultimate substantial reduction in mental functioning;
 For example, if a person is simultaneously deaf-mute
and blind, he/she is deemed to be infirm;
 Senility is deterioration in mental faculty because of
old age;
 The court can declare the interdiction of the above
persons with mental deficiencies;
Cont’d…
 Judicially interdicted persons will lose the authority
to exercise rights and duties as of the date of their
interdiction;
But they, just like minors, exercise rights and duties
they hold through guardians if the interest pertains to
the personality of the incapable and through tutors
where the interest is a proprietary one;
Note that the offices of guardian and tutor have
certain general features in cases of both minority and
judicial interdiction;
The offices are compulsory – it is a civil duty to
become a tutor or a guardian and no consent is
needed;
Cont’d…
 The offices are in principle non-remunerative;
A guardian or a tutor gives the service for free;
The tutor/guardian must be a capable person;
 It is clear that an incapable person cannot exercise
representing others rights and duties that he/she
cannot personally exercise;
The essence of the distinction between the offices of
guardianship and tutorship is the type of activity
undertaken and it does not mean that two different
persons should hold the offices;
Cont’d…
 Both functions can be assumed by a single person;
The offices are strictly personal in the sense that
they cannot be delegated to the exercise of third
party or they cannot be transferred to next of kin
through inheritance;
c) Legal interdiction: -
 This is an incapacity imposed by the law;
 A person will be legally interdicted as a result of
the pronouncement of a legally prescribed
punishment for the violation of criminal law;
Cont’d…
 The prescribed sentence will deny the person the
capacity to carryout economic affairs;
A legally interdicted person retains capacity over his
personality interests and thus no guardian is
necessary;
 A tutor may represent the legally interdicted person
to exercise the latter’s pecuniary rights/duties;
 The assumption of the office of tutorship is, unlike
that of minority or judicial interdiction, voluntary;
 The evident reason is that a person who lost his
privilege because of commission of a crime should
not be favored by compelling others to assume the
role of tutorship on his behalf;
Cont’d…
d) Foreign Nationality: -
 This is a special incapacity because a person is
prevented from exercising specified categories of
rights;
 For instance, the law states that a foreigner
c a n n o t t a k e p a r t i n g o v e r n m e n t a l
administrations;
 Likewise, a foreigner cannot (whether
personally or through an agent) own an
immovable in Ethiopia, nor can he enter certain
investment fields reserved to Ethiopians;
Cont’d…
5)Termination of Physical Personality
Article 1 of the Ethiopian Civil Code also provides for
the way personality of individuals ends;
 It states that human person is the subject of rights
from birth to death, meaning personality ends at
death;
 In this case too, natural death and legal death of a
person are co-existent;
Declaration of absence can, through interpretation,
also result in termination of physical personality;
Cont’d…
The law says that if a person's whereabouts are not
known for a certain period defined by the law (two
years), a judicial declaration of absence having the
effect of death for all legal purposes may be made;
 Among the effects of death are found the opening of
succession of the person and the remarriage of her/his
spouse;
 But most importantly, absence with an effect of death
will end personality of the absence;
Ch-III: Law of Contracts
Contracts are matters of daily life especially in
commerce;
 Thus, the knowledge of fundamental principles of
contract law is of much help in commercial success;
1) Some Remarks on Obligations
 There are all sorts of obligations imposed upon
human beings: moral, religious or social
obligations;
 In the area of social obligations, a special category
is that of legal obligations which will have a
binding effect as opposed to the category known as
natural obligations that are not compulsory or
Cont’d…
Legal obligations can be further split into penal
and civil obligations;
 The specific concern here is with civil
obligations existing between private citizens;
 Civil obligation is a general reference to juridical
acts having distinct legal effects that exist
between two or more persons in their private
relationships concerning something that one
party must undertake towards the other party;
Cont’d…
A civil obligation consists of a juridical relation
between two persons, of whom the one entitled to
demand performance on the obligation is called
creditor and the one who is obliged to perform is
called debtor;
 Thus, the obligation and its correlative right take
the name of debt and credit respectively;
 One of the parties occupies the active position of
creditorship and the other assumes the passive
status of debtorship;
Cont’d…
Every obligation has a corresponding right, but
the nature of the right that corresponds to a civil
obligation and enjoyed by the creditor is
particularly a personal right, i.e., it is a right
against a designated person(s) or a defined class of
persons, as opposed to real rights which are
enforceable against any one at all;
Cont’d…
An obligation exists between persons, be they
physical or artificial, while a real right involves the
association of a person with a thing and the
person can pursue this thing into whosever hands
it falls;
The sources of Binding obligations are generally
law and contract;
 In contract, the will of the parties forms the basis
of the obligation; in the absence of a contract, an
obligation cannot arise except by virtue of the law
and therefore all non-contractual obligations have
the law as their sole source;
Cont’d…
The obligations originating exclusively from the
law may be further founded on civil wrongs or
unjust enrichment;
 Thus, obligations usually emerge contractually by
the natural agreement of the parties and by the law
when the legislator provides so in particular cases
of torts and unjust enrichment;
 But it is beyond the scope of this study to discus
non-contractual obligations and our focus is on
contractual obligations only;
Cont’d…
2) Essential Notions of Contracts
 It is important to be introduced with certain
fundamental quasi-philosophical concepts of
contracts including the definition given by the
Ethiopian law;
 The Ethiopian Civil Code, a systematized
legislative document covering substantial areas of
the civil law, is predominantly influenced by the
Romano-Germanic civil law tradition;
 Accordingly, it shares much of the jurisprudential
aspects of this super legal tradition particularly in
the area of contacts;
Cont’d…
The Civil Code's draftsmanship with a Romano-
Germanic jurisprudential background has
established in contractual matters the theory of the
autonomy of will;
This theory derives from the philosophy of economic
liberalism, and embodies three major consequences:
1)Contractual Freedom:
 there is no obligation to contract; the
contracting parties are free to determine the
scope of their contract; there is no special form
for contracts because consent is sufficient;
Cont’d…
2) Enforceability of contracts:
 A contract has the force of a law between parties;
 The contract is compulsory even for the judge
as he has to decide disputes by referring solely to
the provisions stipulated by the parties in their
contract;
3)The relative effect of contracts:
 A contract has no bearing on third parties, or
parties outside that contractual engagement are
unaffected;
Cont’d…
Contract is a binding agreement;
 It is a promise or set of promises for the breach of
which the law gives a remedy, or the performance
of which the law in some way recognizes as a duty;
 A comprehensive definition incorporating
important elements is given under Art. 1675 of the
Ethiopian Civil Code;
 It states “a contract is an agreement
whereby two or more persons as between
themselves create, vary or extinguish
obligations of a proprietary nature”;
Cont’d…
The contractual elements that emerge out from
dissecting the definition and other related issues are
stated below;
A) Contracts are agreements
 they are based on compulsory exchange of
consent;
 There must be an agreement as to every aspect
of the contract, and this agreement must be
meant to be legally binding;
 Conversely, there are agreements which do not
give rise to a legal bond and therefore not
contracts;
Cont’d…
For instance, acts of courtesy, a ‘‘gentlemen’s
agreement’’, a free performance of service, or
even a consensual relationship between neighbors
to help each other, are not contracts even if they
are agreements;
Therefore, we can conclude that while all contracts
are agreements, the vice versa is not true;
B) A contract needs at least two persons for its
existence
 there cannot be a one-one contract;
 The contract is not a unilateral legal instrument
which is an expression of a single person's wishes;
Cont’d…
Such matters as a will drawing an order of
succession, the acknowledgement of a natural
child, or the resignation made by an employee are
all unilateral expressions of a person's intention to
generate juridical obligations;
 But, none of these are contracts because a
contract cannot emerge by a single person's
actions;
 Contracts are bi-party juridical acts that exist
between two persons to the minimum;
Cont’d…
C) Privity
 a fundamental aspect of contractual liberty is the
concept of privity of contracts;
This is the principle of relative effect of contracts so
much so that third parties are not concerned by the
contracts made by other persons;
 The phrase “as between themselves” in the
definitional provisions of the Ethiopian Civil Code
reveals the concept in that it is only parties to a
contract who are entitled to the benefits or burdened
with the liabilities that arise from the contract, and
not third parties;
Cont’d…
In this regard, a contract is distinguishable from
other collective legal instruments which may be
imposed on persons who did not take part in them;
 A decision taken by a general assembly of
shareholders, for instance, does create a binding
obligation on the shareholders of the company
through the operation of the majority rule even
though they had opposed the obligation;
 The basis of a contractual obligation is the equality
of the parties, an important aspect of which is its
affirmation of individual liberties;
Cont’d…
Thus, the right to enter into a contract is also the right
not to enter into a contract;
D) The object of contracts is the establishment and
performance of an obligation
an obligation is a legal tie (as defined previously),
an action of being bound by a duty, and here it is a
freely imposed or accepted duty;
Being the instrumentality of establishing a legal
bond, entering into a contract entitles the
contracting parties to claim the assistance of public
force, in the guise of the courts and their officials, to
obtain the performance of this contract;
Cont’d…
E) Contracts can be concluded for the creation,
variation and extinguishment of obligations:
An obligation may be created anew, may be amended
in the course of its performance, and finishes one day;
 These three purposes can be achieved by entering
into a contract in each case;
 The parties can, through the instrumentality of
contracts, not only create legal bonds that had not
existed before but also vary existing contracts between
them or, if they want to, can totally extinguish
obligation that had previously been in existence;
Cont’d…
F)Contracts strictly speaking only concern
proprietary, or better, patrimonial issues:
They are legal means of modifying economic
positions of persons – that is why the law regards
contracts as concerned with ''obligations of a
proprietary nature'‘;
 Thus, agreements in respect of personal status, such
as consent to marriage, divorce, or filiations, are not
contracts because they are not pecuniary matters in
their strict sense;
Cont’d…
Agreements regarding personality obey different,
special legal regimes;
It does not mean that certain patrimonial
obligations do not derive from such status-bound
situations, such as the payment of alimony;
 But it means that they are not governed by the
general law of contracts;
Cont’d…
3) Formation of a Contract
 contracts emerge out of the free will of the
contractants;
 But, it may be the case that such free will would
be exercised improperly so that the economic
interest that is the subject matter of a contract
may be prejudiced;
 A party may enter into a contract because the
other party may have improperly induced him to
do so;
Cont’d…
 So, there are two interests at stake here:
1) one is that free will must be reasonably made
and must be legitimate in the circumstances;
2) the other is that the formed contract should be
enabled to produce the economic effect it was
intended for;
 A striking balance between the interests is
reached by the law through the imposition of
certain non-derogable requirements in
contractual undertakings;
Cont’d…
 There is a vested interest for the law, being
cognizant of the possibility of abuse or prejudice of
freedom to contract and of the significance of
contracts as instruments of economic performance,
to intervene in contractual affairs and set certain
standards;
 The law regulates contracts in two ways;
 Firstly, there are provisions of the law that are
deemed mandatory-regarding formation of
contracts from which contracting parties cannot
deviate because of the need to ensure the free
exercise of contractual liberty and due to public
policy reasons;
Cont’d…
 On the other hand, the law provides for
permissive rules that serve the purpose of
filling the gap that may be left by the
contracting parties– parties are free to
determine whatever they like on such regard
but the law steps in so as to fulfill the
contract should the parties fail to do so;
 Accordingly, the law has regarded formative
requirements as essential and, therefore,
compulsory upon the parties to comply with;
Cont’d…
Article 1678 of the Ethiopian Civil Code states that no
valid contract shall exist unless:-
the parties are capable of contracting and give their
consent sustainable at law;
the object of contract is sufficiently defined, and is
possible and lawful;
the contract is made in the form prescribed by law, if
any.
Four mandatory conditions are evident in the provision
above:
 capacity,
 consent,
 object and
 formality;
Cont’d…
 Article 1678 of the Ethiopian Civil Code states that
no valid contract shall exist unless:-
 the parties are capable of contracting and give their
consent sustainable at law;
 the object of contract is sufficiently defined, and is
possible and lawful;
 the contract is made in the form prescribed by law, if
any;
Four mandatory conditions are evident in the provision
above:
I) capacity
II) object and
III) consent,
IV) formality, if required;
Cont’d
1) Capacity-though a person is subject to rights and
d u t ie s f ro m b i r t h to d e a t h, t h e re a re
limitations(incapacities-general/special) on certain
category of persons to conclude contract;
 Minor, Judicial/legal interdicted person and Infirm
persons;
2) Consent
 It is expressed in the form of offer and acceptance;
 offer and acceptance may be communictaed
through oral, written, signal(gusture-nodding
head, shaking hands, hammering down in an
auction etc/object) and by conduct-earnest
etc(Art.1681)
Cont’d…
 Offer is binding on the offeror only if it is addressed
to a specified person, so advertisement is no an
offer to avoid multiple acceptance which is creates
inconvenience to determine the binding acceptance;
 A party making an offer cannot change his opinion;
 An offeror who changes his offer partially or totally
is liable for any material damage on the offeree;
 It is binding if the offer reaches to the oferee;
 He can withdraw it before it reaches to the offeree
to make his offer not binding;
Cont’d…
Consent through acceptance-a positive
acceptance to an offer;
Acceptance is a declaration of intention to be
bound by each and every contents of the offer;
The offeree may have three possible answers
to the offer:
“Yes” answer,
“No” answer,
Acceptance with reservation/having
reservations or alternative proposals to
some of the contents of the offer;
Cont’d
If acceptance is made with reservation or alternative
proposal, the offeree will take the position of the previous
offeror (Art.1690);
 Unless the offeror determines the only way of
communication, acceptance can be made orally, in
w r i t i n g , b y s i g n , e l e c t r o n i c m e d i a , o r
conduct(performing the offered obligations partly or
wholly);
 However, the offeree is not duty bound to accept or even
to respond/no silent amounts to acceptance/(Art. 1682);
Cont’d
Exceptions to Art. 1682:
 If there is duty to accept(Art.1683-silence=
acceptance)-e.g., provider of public goods or
services (Art 1690/91), private enterprise
having contract of concession(Arts 3207-
3243), if there is contractual obligation to
accept an offer(Arts. 1711, 1957);
 Pre-existing contractual relation, silence
amounts to acceptance where:
 The offer is to vary, supplement or
complement the pre-existing contract;
Cont’d
 The offer is made in writing on special document;
 It contains warning that silence amounts
acceptance;
Defect in consent
 it occurs when acceptance or offer do not
indicate what the offeror/offeree really intended;
causes of defect
 wrong information(mistake-about the content or
identity, false statement-, fraud), threat (duress
reverential fear, threat to exercise rights);
Cont’d…
 It causes for invalidation if a mistaken party
demands it so(1808);
Mistake
 it must be fundamental-(about the object/nature-
e.g., loan contract for donation/identity);
 It must be decisive- a rational person would not
have entered into the contract had it not been the
mistake (Art.1699, 1697);
 Fraud (Art.1704)-intentional act of preparing false
information or changing or modifying the content
of the subject matter of the contract in a manner
that cannot be noticeable by ordinary observation;
Cont’d
It is not telling untruth rather making
things/documents to give wrong information;
A defrauded party can claim invalidation where:
The fraud led him to commit a decisive error(had
not been fraud, no contract at all);
 the fraud was committed by the party to the
contract or he knew or should have known the
fraud or drived undue benefit;
False Statement(Art.1705)- it is untrue statement
made intentionally, being indifferent whether it is
true or false, or negligently;
Cont’d
Misleading or silence amounts to false
statement(Art 1705);
In principle, false statement is not a ground for
invalidation of contract, except:
 There is special relationship b/n the lier
contracting party and the mistaken party;
 The relationship should be legally recognized
which creates duty to trust(moral/legal) one
another;
 Such special relationship led the mistaken party
to believe the statements of the other party;
Cont’d…
 Threat-a person may be threatened physically or
psychologically to make an offer or accept the offer.
 Duress(Art.1706, 1707)- warning a party that unless
he enters into a certain contract, certain harm will
follow. Duress resulted in invalidation of contract if:
 There is a threat or warning to cause harm-there
should be real/express threat;
 The harm is on the person himself, spouse or his
ascendant or descendant;
 The harm is on person, life, property, and honor;
Cont’d…
 The party believes that the harm will happen
if he does not consent to the contract;
 The threat should be serious;
 The harm is imminent;
 The threat must impress a reasonable person;
 Re ve re n t i a l f e a r ( u n d u e i n f l u e n ce ) -
(ascendant/superior) it is a psychological
intimidation that if the person does not give his
consent to be bound by the contract, he will be
belittled by some one or the public in general;
Cont’d
For reverential fear, which is presumed to cause
invalidation of the contract, it must be:
It must make the person to lose certain advantages;
The loss must go to the benefit of the person who is
the source of reverential fear;
3) Objects of contract
it is where parties actually undertake;
It is the obligations of both parties;
It may be to do, not to do or to give;
So object of contract is an agreement between the
parties to do, not to do or to give something;
Cont’d
 There is freedom of contract by which parties can
determine the content of their contract(Art 1712);
 However, it is practically impossible to specify all
the possible contents of the contract; hence, the best
approach is to follow the golden rule “do unto
others what you want others do unto you”(Art.1713);
 Hence, in case there is a dispute, the court would
refer good faith, equity, custom and law;
 But, parties, are expected to clearly indicate their
respective obligation;
Cont’d
Freedom of contract, however, is not absolute;
 So, under Ethiopian Law, freedom of contract is
subject to:
 Clarity of objects (Art.1714)-it must be
ascertained with sufficient precision (object
must be defined);
 Possibility of object(Art.1715)- no humanly
impossible object;
 Legality of the object(Art.1716), e.g., contract to
kill some one;
 Morality of the object(Art.1716)-may not be
illegal but immoral, e.g., prostitution contract;
Cont’d
4) Form of contract
 it is the way in which the content of the contract
exists or appears to others;
It answers the question how third parties,
including a court ;
So a contract may exist either in written or oral
form;
The law gives the freedom to the parties to choose
a particular form(written or orally);
But, freedom of form is not absolute—it can be
limited by law or offer(1682/2/);
Cont’d…
The limitation may be for evidentiary value, the
necessity of recalling the content and indication of
intention to create legal relation;
Hence, the following contracts must be made in
written form:
Contracts relating to immovable (Art. 1723);
Contracts with public administration (Art.1724) as
public officials may leave the office there should
be written document; Oral contract is also open
for corruption;
 Contract of insurance and contract of guarantee
(Art. 1725);
Cont’d
 Once parties agree to make it in writing, it is not
complete till the form is fulfilled(Art.1726);
 If agreed to make it in writing, its change must be made
in writing as well(Art.1722);
 When parties or the law requires a contract to be made
in writing, failure to comply the form makes the
contract a mere draft(Art.1720);

Cont’d
Effects of Elements of contract- (consent, object,
capacity and form)
Any contract that miss these elements are either
void or voidable;
Void contract is void abinitio, no effect at all as if it
doesn’t exist;
Both voidable and void contracts have the effect of
invalidation;
However, invalidation of voidable contract has
retroactive effect so that denying the contract to
produce any obligation from the moment of its
inception;
Cont’d…
Reinstatement is made either by returning by the
payment (thing) received or by paying appropriate
compensation for the thing that cannot be
returned;
A party, in void/voidable contract, should repay it;
 Effect of contract- the two major principles are: freedom
and sanctity of contracts;
 Sanctity of contract-refers that parties are bound by their
agreement/ based on the moral principle of pacta sunt
servanda;
 A contract is also legally binding, if not it is not a
contract(Art.1679);
 A contract is a law between/among parties (Art.1731);
Cont’d
It is a law, it should be performed, and violating a
c o n t r a c t e n t a i l s p u n i s h m e n t ( n o n -
performance=>payment of damages);
Performance of contracts-
It refers to fulfilling one’s own obligation as
agreed;
 Who should perform? Art 1740(2):
• The debtor ;
• By His agent;
• by a person authorized by court (curator, );
• by law ( tutors, liquidators, trustees);
Cont’d
Sometimes the creditor may insist that the debtor
himself should perform the obligation(Art.1740(1));
This is when the contract or law expressly provides
that the debtor shall perform the contract personally;
Where personal performance becomes necessary
and when the creditor proves that personal
performance is essential to him(when the obligation
is to do- professional work);
Who may receive payment?
Payment should normally be made to the creditor or his
agent (Art.1741);
 Payment may be made to a tutor, liquidator, trustee
(Art. 1741);
Cont’d
Payment to unqualified person is invalid,
except(Art.1743):
Payment benefited the real creditor even
without his knowledge or express will (e.g.,
paying the debt of the creditor);
Payment confirmed-even if he is not
benefited from the payment—such
confirmation has the effect of ratifying an
act done without authority;
Cont’d
Performance where to be made:
place of performance has implications on cost of
payment, currency for money debt, and
jurisdiction of courts;
The civil code provides three alternatives:
 Agreed place;
 place where the thing situates at the time of
conclusion of contract(if the thing is definite
thing);
 Residence of the debtor (Art.1755/2/), the law
exempts the debtor from transport cost,
inconveniences, waste of working hours;
Cont’d…
 However, the debtor may have more than one
residence, so place of performance is the principal
residence as provided in Art.1775(2) by the word
“normal”;
Performance when to be made?
Time of performance is important to:
Determine transfer of risk;
Cost of maintenance and preservation;
To claim damage for non-performance;
Cont’d
Hence, time of performance may be-
Agreed time (Art.1756(1));
If no agreed time, when the debtor(1756(2)) or
creditor (1756(3)) demands performance;
But, in the following cases, the debtor can postpone
performance time indefinitely (Arts.1757 and 1759);
Simultaneous performance;
Anticipatory breach of contract;
 It is when the debtor informs the creditor before
the debt is due that he (debtor) will not perform his
obligation (Art.1757(2));
 It is implied from the conduct of the debtor or from
Cont’d
If there is a reasonable suspicion that one party may
not discharge his future obligation, the other party is
not bound to carryout his obligation;
Anticipatory breach under Art 1757(2)is invoked
when time of performance of both sides of the
obligation has already determined by contract and
the party claiming anticipatory breach is duty bound
to perform his obligation earlier than the party who
has intended to breach the contract;
In short, anticipatory breach is a justification to
refuse performance, whereas under Art.1789, it is
used as a justification to cancel the contract;
Cont’d
Anticipatory breach (Art 1788) should be express and
if implied, default notice should be given;
Insolvency-when a person is declared bankrupt, all
his future debts mature on the day he is declared
bankrupt (Art.1868);
So he has to pay all his future debts on the date he is
declared bankrupt;
But, bankruptcy should be legal, not factual;
Non-performance of Contracts and its remedies
1) Non-performance
 According to Art.1731, a contract lawfully formed is
a law among the parties;
Cont’d…
 So, parties should discharge their obligations;
 Non-performance, however, refers to parties’
failure to perform contractual obligations in
conformity with the terms of the contract and the
law (breach of the contract);
 It may be total/partial;
 Non-performance affects the interest of other
party, hence it should be remedied;
 Remedies include:
 forced performance;
 cancellation of the contract;
 in addition claim damage be made good;
Cont’d
 However, before resorting to remedy, a victim party
shall put the other party in default by giving
notice(Art.1772);
 Default notice is demanding the debtor to perform
his/her obligation within a certain time limit;
 It should be reasonable and should fix a period of
time after the expiry of which he will not accept
performance of the contract;
 Exception to the rule (Art.1775)-
The obligation is to refrain from certain acts;
The period of time in which the debtor is assumed
to perform expired;
Cont’d…
The debtor has declared in writing that he would
not perform his obligation;
It is agreed in the contract that notice shall not be
required and the debtor shall be in default upon
the expiry of the time fixed;
 Forced/specific performance
It refers to compelling of the debtor to discharge
his obligation personally;
But, specific performance cannot be ordered
unless it is of special interest to the party
requiring it and it can be enforced without
affecting the personal liberty of the debtor;
Cont’d
 Special interest- the importance of the obligation
required to be discharged towards the creditor and
no possibility of being discharged otherwise;
 Substituted performance- in addition to forced
performance, the law provides substituted
performance, through court authorization, as
remedy for non-performance(Art.1777 and 1778)
which is made at the expense and cost of the debtor:
 Art. 1777-Obligation to do or not to do
 Art.1778-substituted performance in respect of
obligation to deliver fungible things;
Cont’d
Cancellation-another remedy for non-performance;
 Cancelation vs. Invalidation
 While invalidation is making the contract
ineffective through court authorization,
Cancelation is a remedy for non-performance
either by a court or unilaterally;
 judicial cancellation-as a rule, cancellation can be
made by a court ,but not all non-performance leads
to cancellation rather the court looks into good
faith of the parties(Art.1785);
 Unilateral cancellation-it is cancellation of contract
without resorting a court;
Cont’d
Unilateral cancellation is possible:
 If agreed time is provided;
 When the debtor failed to honor certain time limits
(Art.1770) (after lapse of period of grace),
Art.1774(after lapse of default notice), and Art.
1775(obligations that must be discharged within
the time fixed);
 Where performance becomes impossible
(Art.1788)-a party may cancel a contract even
before the obligation of the other party is due
where the performance by the other party of his
obligations has become impossible or is hindered
so that the essence of the contract is affected;
Cont’d…
 Anticipatory breach of the contract(Art.1789):
 When a party informs the other in an equivocal
manner that he will not carryout his obligation;
 The party who intends to cancel shall make the
other in default, and no cancellation if the other
produce securities after default notice;
 Notice is not however required if the party
informs the other, in writing, that he will not
perform his obligation;
Cont’d
Damages/compensation(Art.1771(2))-another, but
additional or alternative (Art.1790), remedy for
non- performance of contract;
Its purpose is to put the victim party in a position
he would have been had the contract been
performed;
The amount of damages should be equivalent to
the damage done(Arts.1799-1805);
Defense of damage-
 Though not in principle, the existence of
fault/grave fault on the part of the creditor can
be a defense(Art.1795/1796);
Cont’d…
 Force majeure(Art. 1791)- “the debtor shall not
be released unless he can show that performance
was prevented by force majeure”;
Ch IV: Contract of Sale
Selling and buying are our daily activities;
 A contract of sale is a specific/special contract;
 A general contract of law will apply if the special
contract of sale is silent and when conflict arises
between the general and special contracts the latter
prevails;
Definition of Contract of Sale
 (Art.2266)- a contract of sale is “a contract whereby
one of the parties, the seller undertakes to deliver a
thing and transfer its ownership to another party,
the buyer, in consideration of a price expressed in
money which the buyer undertakes to pay him.”
Cont’d…
 It transfers ownership:
 Ownership in economic and legal terms
represents the fullest right a person would have
over a property;
 So, it includes the right not only to use the thing
but also to demolish, abandon, alienate, or donate
that thing;
 Sale gives a buyer all such powers;
 It is an onerous act:
 A contract of sale is not a liberality;
It is always made for consideration;
 Parties engage in a sale transaction to get some
benefit each, not merely to bind themselves to the
Cont’d…
It is a commutative act:
 The contract of sale is bilateral–the obligation it
entails is divided between the parties thereto;
 The obligation of one party is taken up in
consideration of the obligation of the other;
 Trading parties and mercantile thing:
It is needed that parties to a contract of sale are
traders in the sense that they are free from
insolvency or bankruptcy risks;
They must be worth transacting in commercial
terms;
 Similarly, the thing that is subject mater of sale
must be that within commerce;
Cont’d…
The thing should be a mercantile one upon which
an exchange through legal sale can be effected;
 Traditionally, certain things are outside commerce;
At the forefront is the human person, this
manifests the prohibition of slavery or the sale of
one’s own organs;
 You can’t sell your child or your limbs for that
mater;
 It involves the fixing of a price:
 A characteristic of the contract of sale is the price–
the monetary counterpart of the giving over of the
good for sale;
Cont’d…
 Incidental to this is that the price must be labeled
in a legal currency, that it must be certain or
ascertainable, and that it must be just–not
considerably disproportionate with the value of the
good;
As a final note, one needs to distinguish a sale
contract from certain similar types of exchange
modes;
 Such contract as hiring sale, supplies, barter,
donation, transfer of rights other than ownership,
and contract of service should not be confused with
sale;
Cont’d…
 But, if the party to whom delivery to be made
provides the essential ingredients for the making of
the thing, the contract is best described as service and
not sale;
 For instance, A wants a full garment. A brought the
pieces of textile by his own and hands them over to a
tailor to produce the suit. This agreement is not one of
sale, but service.
Barter is also an onerous contract that is concluded
with a view to transfer ownership;
 But, there is no monetary price in bartering, and the
exchange is made between things’;
Cont’d…
Price expressed in money terms distinguishes sale
from barter;
 Donation on the other hand is a contract of gratuity;
it is not made for consideration;
 One party undertakes the obligation to transfer
ownership of a thing to another;
 But, sale is a bilateral engagement when it comes to
bearing obligations;
Cont’d…
The transfer of rights other than ownership:
 such as usufructs (a right to use and enjoy the
fruit, not to alienate) is in essence different
from sale;
 Usufruct is short of the power to alienate or
dispose of a thing, which ownership contains;
 In sale, ownership is transferred, not merely
usufruct;
A contract may be concluded for hiring a thing;
The intention is that the thing will be returned
back to the lessor;
Cont’d…
 Contract of sale is also different from a contract of
supplies, where a party undertakes for a price to
make in favor of the other party periodical or
continuous deliveries of things;
 This contract relates to the delivery, not to the
transfer of ownership of a thing;
 Price is paid for making the supply;
 There are also certain “forms of sale” recognized
by law;
 They are all forms of sale, but assume different
modes:
 sale on trial;
 sale with ownership reserved; and
Cont’d…
 Sale on trial:
 It is a conditional sale which completes only after
the thing is taken by the prospective buyer and
tried to be suitable;
 If the thing passes the trial, the sale contract
becomes intact;
 Until the trial is made, ownership resides in the
prospective seller and so risk remains with him;
 Sale with ownership reserved:
 It is a contract whereby the seller reserves to
himself the ownership until the buyer pays the
price of the thing he has taken possession;
Cont’d…
 But, until then, the risk is assumed by the buyer, and
the seller may take back the thing;
Finally, there is a type of sale called sale with right of
redemption;
 Right of redemption refers to the right the seller
exercises to buy the thing back;
 Parties can reach agreement so much so that the
seller can re-buy the thing he has sold within a
defined period of time, usually two years, subject of
course to the refund of the appropriate amount of
price to the buyer;
Cont’d
 As a special contract, sale contract involves two
distinct parties: buyer and seller;
“things, "if it can be appropriated by human
beings, is also a definitional element for sale
contract which is a subject matter of sale contract;
“things” should be understood to mean “goods,”
as it is only goods can be possessed and owned;
 “goods” is defined under Art.1126 of Ethiopian
Civil Code that “all goods are movable or
immovable”;
Cont’d
 (Art.1127)-“things which have material existence and
can move themselves or be moved by themselves
without losing their individual character are corporal
chattels”;
Formation of Contract of Sale
 In addition to the requirements in special contracts,
there must be a satisfaction of requirements under
general contract:
Consent (offer and acceptance);
Sufficient clarity of objects;
Lawfulness;
Moral;
Cont’d
The obligation assumed by the buyer is to pay the
price fixed;
If not expressly determined by the parties, it may be
submitted to third party arbitration the
rejection/lack of consensus of which results no-sale
contract at all;
The price can also be determined by taking into
account current price or market price;
Performance of sale of contract
Performance is just to refer discharging the
obligations of:
 The seller;
Cont’d…
 Common obligations of both parties (transfer
of risks, expenses and preservation of the
thing), as imposed by the law, custom, or good
faith for the performance of sale contract;
Cont’d
 Obligations of the seller:
 Obligation to deliver the thing-handing
over/transfer not only the principal thing but also
accessories at agreed time, place , quality and
quantity (actual delivery(1140), constructive
delivery(1145), symbolic delivery-physical
handling of other things that represent the things
sold);
 If no agreed time, the seller shall deliver the thing
as soon as the buyer requires him to do
so(Art.2276)—delivery of the thing shall be
simultaneous with the payment of the price
unless agreed to the contrary;
Cont’d
 Obligation to transfer ownership;
 Obligation to warrant(quality, character or
s u i t a b i l i t y ) t h e b u y e r a g a i n s t
dispossession(transfer of an assailable rights),
defects, and non-conformity:
 Warranty is either express(using pictures,
drawings, blue prints, or technical
specifications, models, samples) or
implied(from the law whether the seller
made it expressly or not);
Cont’d…
 Implied warranty is imposed on the seller to set
the interest of promoting higher standards in
the market for the buyer commonly has little
/no opportunity to examine goods carefully
before making a decision to buy them;
 Buyers are not in a position to test the quality;
 The seller/manufacturer of such goods to
determine their adequacy and quality;
 Warranty of dispossession is not workable where
the buyer is:
 awareness of the threat of dispossession;
Cont’d…
 Where it is excluded by agreement;
 When the buyer fails to join the seller in the
proceeding against him;
 When dispossession is due to the act of the
buyer;
Obligations of the Buyer(Art.2303)-
Obligation to pay price;
Obligation to take delivery;
Other obligation imposed by the contract;
 Obligation to pay price-it is the cost at which a
thing is bought;
Cont’d
 The obligation to pay price includes all the
necessary preparation by taking the customs
and practices of usage(e.g., opening bank
account if payment is by check, to give security
for the payment, obligation to accept bills of
exchange);
 What price? What if not clearly determined?
 Things at current price/market price,
 Quantity greater than the agreed-at the will of
the buyer to accept or reject the excess;
Cont’d
Place of payment-if not fixed, the price should be
pied at the place of the seller or at place of delivery if
payment and delivery is agreed to be simultaneous;
Obligation to take delivery of the thing
(Art.2313)-the buyer shall, after delivery, take such
steps as may be necessary for completing the
delivery of the thing;
Transfer of Risk under Contract of Sales of Movables
Transfer of risk is important in sale contract;
Risk refers to the liability for loss or deterioration
of a thing sold;
Cont’d
The thing sold may be damaged, destroyed or lost;
When goods are destroyed at the hands of the buyer,
risk is said to be transferred to such buyer;
In principle, risk shall be born by the person who is
in a better position of avoiding the risk, or shared
when none of the parties is in a better position of
avoiding the risk;
The person who bears the risk is to cover the value
of the thing which has been damaged or lost;
Cont’d
 Under Art.2323 of the Civil Code of Ethiopia, risk
is transferred from seller to the buyer where:
 Until delivery (Art.1758(1)) the debtor (the
seller) bears the risk till);
 Delay of the buyer, after put in default for not
taking delivery (Art.1758(2));
 Generally, risk is transferred when the thing
delivered conforms to the terms of the agreement;
Ch V: Law of Agency
One may not be able to present more than a place
at a time;
One may not have all the professions/skills on a
certain affairs;
One may no also be able to perform a certain task
due to certain forms of incapacity;
Hence, the facts mentioned so far necessitated an
individual to be represented for certain activities
to be performed in his absence but on his own
behalf;
So, law of agency facilitates and governs such
representations;
Cont’d…
Rationale of Agency:
Reduces the cost of both the principal and 3rd parties;
It satisfies the special requirements for
professional need of the principal;
 It reduces the inconveniences to deal with
everything personally;
The need to represent legal persons as they have
no mind and physical appearance;
The need to overcome incapacities(to do
juridical acts);
Cont’d…
 The internal contract- (Formation and
Requirements)
(Art. 2179)- two sources of agency;
 By agreement;
 By law
By agreement presupposes the existence of two
separate contract:
 The internal contract (agent and principal);
 The main contract(agent and 3rd parties)
Agency is one of special contracts, so the elements
of valid contracts in general should be
satisfied(Art.1678);
Cont’d…
 Capacity;
 Defined object;
 Lawful, moral and possible object;
 Form, if any,
 Scope of authority
The scope of power of the agent is determined by
internal contract;
If not specifically determined, it should be
determined based on the nature of the
transaction(Art.2202);
 Agency may be: special or general(Art.2202(2));
Cont’d…
General Agency:
The power is conferred in general terms (expressed
like-all ‘many affairs,’ ‘any thing related to
property,’ ‘any affairs which I’m called to
perform’);
They shall be limited to acts of management on the
preservation or maintenance of those affairs or rights
of the principal;
An agent is empowered only to sustain the rights of
the principal not to dispose;
Acts of management include:
 acts done for the preservation/ maintenance of
property;
Cont’d…
collection of debts;
investment of income;
discharge of debts;
sale of crops;
 sale of goods intended to be sold; and
sale of perishables;
 Special Agency
It is d/t from general agency as the agent is
empowered to dispose the rights of the principal
in special agency;
 It is also termed as acts of disposition;
Cont’d
The agent is to act in a particular transaction, affairs
specified in the contract and their natural consequences
(Art.2202(2));
 The act to be performed by the agent is specifically
provided including sale of a house, lease of land etc;
 A power in special agency is broader than general agency;
 Acts that require special authority:
 Alienating/ mortgaging real estate (acts of disposition);
 Investing capital (not income);
 Signing bills of exchange;
 Effecting settlement and consenting to arbitration;
 Making donations;
 Bringing and defending an action;
Cont’d…
 Modes of Representation(responding to 3rd parties):
 Disclosed agency(“contracts are made by an
agent in the name of the principal within the
scope of his power is deemed to have been made
by the principal”)Art.2189(1);
 Partially disclosed agency(an agent is contracting
in his own name though the third party knows he
is an agent);
 Undisclosed agency(neither the name nor the
status of the agent is disclosed);
 Only disclosed agency do have the effect of agency;
Cont’d…
 Duties of the agent(arising from agreement, law
and incidental) are:
 Performance- since it is contract, it should be
performed;
 Duty to protect the interest of the principal,
including avoiding conflict of interest;
Conflict of interest may occur:
 When the agent contracts with 3rd parties;
 When the agent contracts with the principal;
 When the agent contracts with himself;
Cont’d…
 (Art. 2209)an agent should act to the exclusive
interest of the principal and should not drive any
benefit without the knowledge of the principal;
 Diligence required from him-act as a bonus pater
familias, with care and maximum skill etc;
 Duty to account–he shall account for the principal
about his management affairs; shall inform
without delay that he has accomplished his agency;
Cont’d…
 Duties of the principal:
Remuneration if the contract is not for
gratuitous(Arts. 2219 & 2220);
Duty to advance money to the agent for carrying out
the agency (Art.2221);
Duty to reimburse expenses(Art.2221);
 Liabilities of principal, agent and third parties
Sometimes the agent may work with a lapsed
authority or an authority departed from its terms;
In principle, only disclosed agency have the effect
between principal and 3rd party; but there are
exception when the principal ratifies unauthorized
act (Art.2264);
Cont’d
The agent shall be personally liable to 3rd party in
two cases:
 Where the agent acted beyond the scope of his
power;
 And/or the agent acted in his own name unless
the third party is aware of the fact;
Chapter Six
Labour Law
 6.1 Sources of Regulation
 The sources of labour laws are International and National laws.
 Some of the International origins are Forced Labour Convention, ; Freedom of
Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention; Employment
Service Convention; right to Organize and Collective Bargaining convention ; A
bolition of Forced Labour Convention; Minimum Age Convention; Occupation
al Safety and Health Convention; Termination of Employment Convention; an
d Private Employment Agencies Convention.
 The national origin may be classified into public and private ones.
 The public acts include the FDRE Constitution, the Labour Proclamation No 37
7/96 together with its amendments Proclamation No 494/98 and decisions of t
he Federal Supreme Court Cassation Bench.
 The private acts are instruments of private nature but binding as though they a
re law. Thus, strictly speaking they are not law, all the same they are
assimilated to law. These are Contracts of
employment, Collective agreements and Work
rules. The first two instruments are bilateral ones
while the third one is a unilateral instrument.
 Collective agreement" means an agreement conclu
ded in writing between one or more representative
of trade unions and one or more employers or agen
ts or representatives of employers organizations.
 Whereas “work rules" means, subject to the safety and the
prevention", of accidents, disciplinary measures and its im
plementation as well as other conditions of work.
 6.2 SCOPE OF APPLICATION
 The labour law is applicable to employment relations based on a contract of em
ployment that exist between a worker and an employer except the followings.
 contracts for the purpose of upbringing, treatment, care or rehabilitation;
 contracts for the purpose of educating or training other than apprentice;
 managerial employee who is vested with powers to lay down and execute mana
gement policies by law or by delegation of the employer depending on the type
of activities of the undertaking with or without the aforementioned powers an i
ndividual who is vested with the power to hire, transfer, suspend,
lay off, assign or take disciplinary measures against
employees and include legal service head who
recommend measures to be taken by the employer
regarding managerial issues by using his independent
judgment in the interest of the employer;
 contracts of personal service for non-profit making pu
rposes;
 contracts relating to persons such as members of the Armed Force, members of
the Police Force, employees of state administration, judges of courts of law, pro
secutors and others whose employment relationship is governed by special law
s;
 contracts relating to a person who performs an act, for consideration, at his ow
n business or professional responsibility.
6.3 Formation of Contract of Employment
 6.3.1 The Element of a Contract of Employment
 A contract of employment is formed where a person agrees directly or indirectl
y to perform work for and under the authority of an employer for a definite or i
ndefinite period or piece work in return for wage.
 It shall be stipulated clearly and in such manner as that the parties are left with
no uncertainty as to their respective rights and obligations under the terms the
reof; and
 it shall specify the type of employment and place of work the rate of wages, met
hod of calculation thereof, manner and interval of payment and duration of th
e contract.
 But, it shall not be concluded for the performance of unlawful or immoral activ
ities and shall not lay down less favorable conditions for the employee than tho
se provided for by law, collective agreement or work rules.
6.3.2 Form of Employment Contract
 As regards to forms of contract, the labour law regime in principle does not req
uire an special form for contractual validity.
 Contract of Employment made in writing shall specify the name and address of
the employer; the name, age, address and work card number, if any, of the work
er; the agreement of the contracting parties on the type of employment and pla
ce of work the rate of wages, method of calculation thereof, manner and interv
al of payment and duration of the contract; and the signature of the contractin
g parties.
 However, where the contract of employment-is not made in written form, the e
mployer shall, within 15 days from the conclusion of the contract, give the work
er a written and signed statement containing the requirements mentioned abo
ve in written form of contract.
 If such written statement is not wholly or partly objected to by the worker
 within 15 days from the date of receipt, it shall be d
eemed a contract of employment concluded betwe
en the worker and the employer.
 Nevertheless, failure to comply with the elements
of written contract and non-reducement of other f
orm of contract to written contract does not depriv
e the worker of his rights under labour Proclamati
on.
6.4 Duration of the Labour Contract
 Any contract of employment shall be deemed to have b
een concluded for an indefinite period except the for f
ollowings contract of employment for definite period or
piece work:
 the performance of specified piece work for which the
employee is employed;
 the replacement of a worker who is temporarily absent
due to leave or sickness or other causes;
 the performance of work in the event of abnormal pre
ssure of work;

 the performance of urgent work to prevent damage or
disaster to life or property, to repair defects or break do
wns in works, materials, buildings or plant of the unde
rtaking;
 an irregular work which relates to permanent part of t
he work of an employer but performed on an irregular
intervals;
 seasonal works which relate to the permanent part of t
he works of an employer but performed only for a speci
fied period of the year but which are regularly
repeated in the course of the years;
 an occasional work which does not form part of the permanent activity of the e
mployer but which is done intermittently;
 the temporary placement of a worker who has suddenly and permanently vacat
ed from a post having a contract of an indefinite period for not more than 45 co
nsecutive days;
 and the temporary placement of a worker to fill a vacant position in the period
between the study of the organizational structure and its implementation for n
ot more than 45 consecutive days.
 In addition, an employee may be employed for a probation period for the purpo
se of testing his suitability to a post in which he is expected to be assigned and
such probation period shall be made in writing and shall not exceed 45 consecu
tive days.
6.4 Modification of Contract of Employment
 Conditions of a contract of employment which are not
determined under the labour Proclamation, may be m
odified by collective agreement; work rules or written a
greement of the parties.
 But, amalgamation or division or transfer of ownership
of an undertaking shall not have the effect of modifyin
g a contract of employment.
6.5 Obligation of the Employer and Employee
 6.5.1 Obligations of an Employer
 An employer shall in addition to special stipulations in
the contract of employment have the following obligati
ons:
 to provide work to the worker in accordance with the c
ontract of employment and to provide him with imple
ments and materials necessary for the performance of
the work;
 to pay the worker wages and other emoluments; to res
pect the worker's human dignity;
 to take all the necessary occupational safety and healt
h measures and to abide by the standards and directive
s to be given by the appropriate authorities in respect o
f these measures;
 to defray the cost of medical examination, of the work
er whenever such medical examination is required by l
aw or the appropriate authority;
 to keep a register of workers particulars; to give the worker
a certificate of service upon termination of a contract of em
ployment or whenever the worker so requests;
 to allow and respect all the leave and rest day of the w
orker;
 to pay legal payments for lawful termination of work ,
compensation for unlawful termination ,and disability
because of occupational accident and diseases;
 and to observe the provisions of this Proclamation, coll
ective agreement, work rules, directives and orders iss
ued in accordance with law.
 It will be unlawful acts to the Employer if he:
 impedes the worker in any manner in the exercise of h
is rights or take any measure against him because he e
xercises his right;
 discriminate against female workers, in matters of rem
uneration, on the ground of their sex;
 terminate a contract of employment contrary to the pr
ovisions of the Proclamation;
 coerce any worker by force or in any other manner to join o
r not to join or to cease to be a member of a trade union or t
o vote for or against any given candidate in elections for tra
de union offices;
 require any worker to execute any work which is hazar
dous to his life;
 and discriminate between workers on the basis of nati
onality, sex, religion, political outlook or any other con
ditions.
6.5.2 Obligations of the Workers
 Every worker shall have the obligations:
 to perform in person the works;
 to follow instructions given by the employer based on t
he terms of the contract and work rules;
 to handle with due care all instruments and tools entru
sted to him for work;
 to report for work always in fit mental and physical conditions; to give a
ll proper aid when an accident occurs or an imminent danger threatens
life or property in his place of work without endangering his safety and
health;
 to inform immediately the employer any act which end
angers himself or his fellow workers or which prejudice
the interests of the undertakings;
 And to observe the provisions of Labour Proclamation,
collective agreement, work rules and directives issued i
n accordance with the law.
 It will also be unlawful acts for the Worker if she:
 intentionally commit in the place of work any act whic
h endangers life and property;
Business Law-- Powerpoint Presentation.ppt
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Business Law-- Powerpoint Presentation.ppt

  • 2. Introduction Business law is a body of rules (laws) which govern business and commercial activities (in particular, it regulates law of person, contract, agency, business organizations/partnerships); A branch of civil law; Consists both public and private law issues;  Hence, every business professionals should be aware of the legal environment that regulates the business activities he/she is operating;
  • 3. Ch-I: Introduction to Law 1) Meaning of Law:  No consensus in defining the term “law”;  Different scholars have tried to define law differently;  For Instance: The Greek philosopher Aristotle thought of law as a “pledge that citizens of a state will do justice to one another”. Aristotle defined “law” as “ a rule of Conduct”;  Aristotle’s student, Plato, asserted that law was “a form of social control”;
  • 4. Cont’d…  Cicero, a Roman philosopher, believed law was “the agreement of reason and nature, the distinction between the just and the unjust”; The British legal scholar Sir William Blackstone described law as “a rule of civil conduct prescribed by the supreme power in a state, commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong”;
  • 5. Cont’d…  The famous US Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes on his part contended that law was a set of rules that allowed one to predict how a court would resolve a particular dispute – “the prophesies of what the courts will do in fact and nothing more pretentious …”; Though business law is defined in similar way, business law, in its special nature, regulates the relationship between individuals with one another as they affect economic order; Law may be permissive or prohibitive, and the same is true for business law;
  • 6. Cont’d 2) Features of Law: i) Generality The most obvious feature of law is its generality;  Law is a general statement regarding a possible human conduct;  Any valid legal norm is applicable to all the subjects in the author’s territory;  Law is not meant to shape the behavior of a certain category of persons and leave others; every one is subject to the application of any duly existed law, saving extremely exceptional circumstances (such as exemption from legal liability to a certain degree
  • 7. Cont’d…  For instance, a law passed by the Ethiopian legislator (the House of Peoples’ Representatives) demands all Ethiopians to comply with it, irrespective of race, language, religion, social status, sex and political outlook;  The generality of laws also implies that a law is applicable to all similar cases, and it does not leave others and govern some; ii) Normativity One of the distinctive features of law is that it is a normative statement;  This accords with the philosophical discourse on the dichotomy between the “is” and the “ought”;
  • 8. Cont’d… The characterization of law as a normative statement refers to the “ought” aspect of the discourse, the statement of what should be rather than what is;  Law is not a factual statement (description is not in the nature of law); it is rather a prescriptive tool which purports to shape human behavior in the future; iii) Establishment in Permanence The coming into force of law presupposes, at least presumably, its indefinite existence in the future;
  • 9. Cont’d…  It is unusual to fix a time-limit for the application of law;  A frequently changing law creates social instability and more prone to losing legitimacy;  This does not mean, however, that laws live forever; They have to be reasonably flexible to accommodate changing social realities; Change in societal circumstances is normally a gradual process and the corollary gradual remolding of laws cannot be regarded as resulting in an unstable phenomenon;
  • 10. Cont’d… Laws violate the virtue of permanence and create instability when they change quickly and unnecessarily without having regard to the status of the situation it is meant to govern;  Law might exist exceptionally for temporary application; The possibility of the declaration of sate of emergency (e.g. six months-Art.93(3) of FDRE Constitution) explains such a circumstance;  The law declaring the emergency situation remains in force until the matter that called for the declaration of emergency secedes;
  • 11. Cont’d… But overall, law is to be established in permanence and a time frame would be fixed only in exceptional circumstances; iv) Intimacy with Human Behavior and State Law is a social norm and its ultimate concern is regulation of the social behavior of human beings;  The claim of law would naturally be made by men with respect to or as against each other;  Law cannot be employed to govern relationships of other animate or inanimate things as among themselves; it is not concerned with a claim between humans and other things either;
  • 12. Cont’d…  The intimacy of the law and the state is far from question;  In reality, one cannot conceive of one without the other (they are two inseparable aspects of the same system); One cannot have validity or legitimacy without the other; Indeed, the state is itself brought into life by law and cannot continue in that status without using law; The law on the other hand would have life and produce the desired effects only by the backing of centrally organized state machinery;
  • 13. Cont’d… v) Strongly Institutionalized We have said above that law is backed by an established system of a state;  The state is known for its strong institutionalization and this provides the law with institutionalized system of enforcement;  The state is constituted by centrally established institutions of legislature, executive and judiciary entrusted with the tasks of law making, law enforcement and interpretation of laws respectively;  The combined operation of these organs sanctions the law by a strong force;
  • 14. Cont’d… 3) Law Vs Other Social Norms  Law is a social norm, but not the only one;  There are also other values of normative significance in a society; This “other social norms” category is filled perhaps by ethics or morality, culture, religion, and the like; These ethical/moral, or religious values are normative in the sense that they, just like law, prescribe what should be and what should not be and accordingly shape the social behavior of man;  To this extent, law possesses an identical attribute to that of ethics, morality or religion;
  • 15. Cont’d… Nevertheless, there are conspicuous differences between law and other social norms; Firstly, One important issue that differentiates law from the other social norms is mechanism of their enforcement;  Law is backed by a strong sanction of the state and would be institutionally enforced; Ethical/moral/religious norms on the other hand lack such external and effective enforcement mechanism; Their observance is more often than not demanded in point of conscience than through external organ;
  • 16. Cont’d…  Individuals can breach these norms with impunity and the most they would suffer is moral guilt; Secondly, scope of application is a distinguishing mark between law and the “other social norm” category;  Law enjoys uniform and nationwide application;  But the other social norms are peculiar to particular groups and therefore suffer from extremely localized (restricted) application;  There could be a number of religions, cultures or customary practices in a state; none of them would have norms that apply beyond their own peculiarities;
  • 17. Cont’d… Thirdly, law can still be identified vis-à-vis other normative values of the society on the basis of the mechanism by which it is created and changed;  Law originates from a centrally established and clearly defined institutional framework; The existence of clear institutionalized system would make it easy to bring law into effect and to amend it; Non-legal norms, on the other hand, do not normally have an easily traceable institutional origin for they are not made in an organized way;
  • 18. Cont’d… They come into existence through a practice by a concerned group over a relatively longer time in a scattered and uncentralized manner;  The development of these non-legal norms out of unclear and gradual process makes it equally difficult to amend them;  They are not amenable to easy and fast amendment for they are rigidly established;  Fourthly, a further important factor that can be regarded as a virtue of law over non-legal norms is the exhaustiveness and clarity embedded in law;
  • 19. Cont’d… Law would be exhaustively proclaimed (mostly written) and sufficiently clear;  The conduct it purports to command or prohibit and the consequences of behaving otherwise would be fixed in advance;  Normative rules of ethics, morality, or religion are, on the other hand, barely exhaustive and known for their manifest lack of clarity;  And mostly non-legal norms do not determine the consequences of breach in advance;  Since they are mostly unwritten, they are surrounded by a cloud of vagueness and obscurity;
  • 20. Cont’d 4) Functions of Law Law fundamentally maintains peace and security in the society; It is also important to note that law delves into almost every social interaction. It regulates the way a particular relationship is to be created, maintained and broken. It steps into govern detailed individual interactions. Laws of family for instance are concerned with the regulation of the institution of marriage and matrimonial affairs.
  • 21. Cont’d…  Contract and property laws administer contractual bonds and property relationships of individuals respectively. Business laws, on the other hand, intend to shape behavior in commercial transactions and ensure the interaction is conducted in healthy and effective manner;  Law protects citizens from arbitrary and excessive governmental actions. That body of law which sets out structure of the state and the relationship the government of that state would have with citizens is referred to as constitutional law;
  • 22. Cont’d…  The powers and functions of the government are usually defined by a constitution, and this law restrains undue governmental encroachment in the affairs of subjects. Human rights provisions are typical examples in this regard–that they call upon the government to either act or refrain from acting in the protection and enforcement of human rights; Law of constitution can function in such a way that the various organs constituting the government discharge their tasks in an atmosphere of harmony and transparency;
  • 23. Cont’d… The principle of checks and balances incorporated into most republican constitutions reveals the possibility of review of actions or decisions of the legislative, executive or judicial bodies by one another; Laws are also instrumental in fighting harmful traditional practices (HTPs). Early marriage has been the widespread practice in many parts of Ethiopia. Marriage is a big affair upon which family, the fundamental unit of the society, is found. Yet, such purpose is served only if spouses are psychologically and biologically matured enough;
  • 24. Cont’d… Ignorant of such fact, most Ethiopian parents force their teenage children (especially girls) to marry while they are in fragile mental and physical conditions, exposing them to various economic, social and biological problems; The same is true of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM). The law is a typical tool in reducing, and ultimately eradicating, these harmful traditional practices;  Law also plays a prominent role in improving the life of the society through the encouragement of innovation and creativity;
  • 25. Cont’d… Law encourages individuals to engage in innovative tasks by granting them rights to exclusive enjoyment of their inventions via issuing patents, copyrights, trademarks and the like. These mechanisms bestow inventors and authors of new ideas with economic and moral benefits, thereby helping society to make use of better means of life;
  • 26. Cont’d… 5) Classifications of Law  The body of law is huge. To study it one must break it down by means of classification;  Classification of laws is the systematization of the law based on the subject matter for the purpose of finding the relevant law more easily and determining whether different legal rules were required depending on their area of application;  No single classification system can cover the large mass of legal information. Consequently, those systems that have been devised tend to overlap;
  • 27. Cont’d… The best known classifications of law follows are as follows: 1) Public Vs Private Law Public law addresses the relationship between persons and their government, and between various governments. They are public in the sense that the interest of the public at large is at stake as represented by the government. Criminal law and constitutional law, for example, are generally classified as public law, because they deal with persons and their relationships to government;
  • 28. Cont’d… Criminal acts, though they may involve only one victim, are seen as offenses against the society as a whole and prohibited by governments for the purposes of protecting the public. Constitutional law is a public law because it involves question of whether the government (federal, state or local in a federal setting, or the central government in a unitary system) has the power to act in a particular fashion; Private law governs direct dealings between persons. When persons deal or affect other persons, such as in a contractual relationship, the law governing these relationships is classified as private law;
  • 29. Cont’d… Private law may ultimately advance societal interests as a whole, but its immediate concern is with individual transactions that affect the legal positions of the transacting persons. Agency, law of commercial paper, trade and business organizations, sales, torts, insurance and any other area of business law is essentially classified as private law 2) Substantive Vs Procedural Law Substantive law includes all laws that define, describe, regulate and create legal rights and obligations;
  • 30. Cont’d… This body of law establishes acts and situations producing effect at law. For instance, a rule stating that promises are enforced only when each party has received something of value from the other party is part of substantive law. So, too, is a rule stating that a person who has injured another through negligence must pay damages. Most of the bodies of law we have highlighted above, both public and private, are substantive laws. Substantive law tells us what our rights are; Procedural law sets out the methods of enforcing the rights established by substantive law;
  • 31. Cont’d…  Questions about how a lawsuit should begin, what documents need to be filed, which court will hear the suit, which witnesses can be called, how the judicial proceedings is conducted, and so on are all questions of procedural law;  In brief procedural law tells us how to exercise substantive rights. Civil procedure, criminal procedure and evidence are typical examples; 3) Civil Vs Criminal Law Civil law is concerned with the duties that exist between persons or between citizens and their government (the latter as an ordinary legal person), excluding the duty not to commit crimes;
  • 32. Cont’d… Contract law, for example, is part of civil law. The whole body of tort law, which has to do with the infringement, in the absence of contract, by the person of the legally recognized rights of another is an area of civil law; Criminal law, in contrast to civil law, is concerned with wrongs committed against the public as a whole. Criminal law is always public where as civil law is sometimes public and sometimes private. In a criminal case, the government seeks to impose a penalty on an allegedly guilty person;
  • 33. 1.3. Making and Highrarchy of laws  In most of the Country the Law making organ is the le gislative body of the government but the executive bra nch may be delegated to make a law that needs detail e xpertise.  In Ethiopian context, the constitution provides that th e peoples of Ethiopia through their representative ado pted the constitution. The law making body is the Parl iament/legislative body/.This body also ratify internati onal treaties.
  • 34.  The law enacted by such body may called proclamatio n or code or else other.  The Parliament may delegate the executive branch/Co uncil of Ministers/ to enact Regulation based on the pr oclamation. This in turn may delegate a certain Minist ry to enact Directives which flows out of the Proclamat ion and Regulation.
  • 35.  Most of the time, the Hierarchy of Laws from Superior to lower or top to bottom are the Constitution,Proclam aion,Regulation and Directives.  But, if the international treaties are about fundamenta l human rights and freedoms, the constitution comes next to such ratified laws.  If there is a conflict in between or among such laws, th e law or laws at the higher level shall prevail over.
  • 36. CHAPTER TWO LAW OF PERSON Personality is a fundamental concept in law because no dealings of legal significance would produce effects without it;  It answers the basic question who the subjects of the law are;  Only subjects of the law can enjoy the rights that the law confers upon them and only they can discharge the duties it imposes upon them;  Thus, the normal effect of personality is the ability to be a party to legal transactions and perform various juridical acts (acts having effect at law) having effect of law;
  • 37. Cont’d… Personality is granted to two categories of beings and accordingly is of types;  One is physical or natural personality that is possessed by human beings;  In the past, not all human beings were subjects of the law;  For instance, slaves were regarded as mere chattels of their masters and did not have any rights or duties of their own;  They were objects of legal transactions rather than subjects of the law;  So, during those times, personality was conferred upon non-slaves;  But these days, with the abolition of slavery and its strict prohibition, virtually all human beings possess personality and perform juridical acts;
  • 38. Cont’d… The other type of personality is that accorded to beings that do not have material existence; Associations, companies, organizations, partnerships, corporations or even the state are only perceived by the law to exist; These fictitious entities are exclusive innovations of the law and accordingly given personality because of the necessities of modern complex legal transactions; 1) Beginning and Termination of Artificial Personality:  There could be numerous mechanisms through which moral persons will begin to have legal life;
  • 39. Cont’d…  Of these mechanisms, the famous ones are issuance of a specific legislation, effecting registration and requirements of publicity;  For instance, public enterprises will start to have p e r s o n a l i t y u p o n t h e e n a c t m e n t o f establishment regulations with no other conditions attached to it;  On the other hand, private business organizations need to be registered with a competent public authority in order to acquire legal personality;  They should also comply with publicity requirements;
  • 40. Cont’d…  So, acquisition of personality by business organizations is realized by meeting the requirements of both registration and publicity, and only as a consequence of such they can validly undertake acts of civil life;  Just like artificial personality commences through issuance of statutes or effecting registration and publicity, it ends through the enactment of dissolving law or the striking out of the name of the entity from the public registry;
  • 41. Cont’d…  To terminate the legal personality of a public enterprise, regulations would be issued and these would serve the purpose of ending the legal life of the enterprise;  Ordinary business organizations would cease to have legal life when they are canceled from the registry and/or through the revocation of the license issued to them as evidence of personality;
  • 42. Cont’d…  Artificial personality may also end as a matter of fact where the object for which the entity is established becomes impossible to achieve or where that organization is dissolved because of bankruptcy;  In all above cases, the fictitious beings would die out and they can no more be parties to transactions having effect at law;  Any act done by these beings after their personality has terminated is deemed never to have happened for all legal purposes;
  • 43. Cont’d… 2) Attributes of Legal Personality Being recognized as a person by the law makes the person possess certain attributes;  The most noticeable of these attributes are: i) Having a name: -  It may be very simple to coin a name and call a certain being by that;  But names do really affect the legal position of a person because they are mechanisms of identifying the civil identity of a specific person in the society and of legally conferring/imposing upon it powers and disabilities;
  • 44. Cont’d… Furthermore, since use of a name can modify the legal status of a person, the law provides for protective mechanisms against abuse and usurpation of the name by others; Generally, it is through name as a manifestation of civil identity that a person in the eyes of the law can become a party to a legal transaction, and thus it is a fundamental attribute of personality; ii)To sue and be sued (in one's name):-  To sue is to bring a legal action against another, and, conversely, to be sued is to face a legal action brought against oneself by another;
  • 45. Cont’d…  In both cases, one attends a law court where rights and duties are often modified through judgments;  Because they involve alteration of one's legal position and determination of liability, suits should be brought by and against the concerned person in its own name; For instance, if three people (A, B and C) form a company and the latter has satisfied the requirements of law for the acquisition of personality, it brings legal actions against others in the name of the company and not in the name of the owners;
  • 46. Cont’d…  Similarly, others institute a legal action against the company in the name of the company and not in the name of A, B, or C (the owners); Thus, a distinction is drawn between the liability of the company and the individual persons forming it; iii)Entering into contractual relations: -  Since a legal person is an entity that can be a party to legal transactions, it can enter into various contracts in its own name;
  • 47. Cont’d…  A company can conclude a contract with another company or with a human being, and the rights acquired as well as the liabilities incurred because of the contract belong to the company itself, and not to the owners;  It is this legal person itself that is either the creditor or the debtor of a third party contractant; iv) Ownership and administration of property: -  A legal person can exercise all property rights to the exclusion of others and enjoys ownership and administration right over all chattels belonging to it;
  • 48. Cont’d…  Property belonging to a legal person is distinct from the property of its owners, i.e. they belong to essentially different patrimonies; v) Obligation to pay taxes: -  A legal person is liable to pay taxes on taxable benefits and gains;  Since it is authorized to own and administer property and since it can carry on business, a legal person pays taxes on its property and income in the same way human beings do;
  • 49. Cont’d…  While it is generally true that fictitious beings possess all the above features on their own behalf, there are also some other points we need to take note of here; We know that moral or juridical persons do not have a physical existence, and so they are without the natural faculties of thinking, deciding or moving;  That means they necessarily undertake through human agents when they carry out the above affairs:  They use human mind and decision when they coin the name by which they are
  • 50. Cont’d…  they bring suits and defend same being represented by human beings;  it is again human agents that exercise property ownership and administration, and sign a contract on the behalf of the legal person;  But, all such acts performed by the human agent through representation are deemed to have been directly undertaken by the legal person, and the rights and duties arising therefrom would bind the legal person and not the human agent;
  • 51. Cont’d… Individuals only facilitate transactions and they then step-out of the legal consequences; The conferring of personality upon moral persons and accordingly authorizing them to own property and conduct business in their own name give rise to the concept of limited liability; The fact that the property and patrimony of the legal person is distinct from that of its owners means that the legal person is liable to the extent of its property only; T h e l i a b i l i t y d o e s n o t e x te n d to t h e property/patrimony of the owners;
  • 52. Cont’d… 3) Commencement of Physical Personality Principle: Most legal systems accept birth as a time when personality of a human being begins;  Similarly, Art.1 of the Ethiopian Civil Code provides “the human person is the subject of rights from its birth…”;  Birth refers to the complete extrusion of the baby from its mother's womb either in a natural way or by a medical operation;  In this sense, the beginnings of natural and legal existence are simultaneous;
  • 53. Cont’d… Birth alone is a sufficient condition to confer personality under the Ethiopian law, and no other requirements are attached to it; Exception:  Because personality begins at birth as a matter of principle, an unborn body is not a person in the eyes of the law and can have no rights;  But this general rule is excepted in that personality may be granted to a merely conceived baby without waiting for its birth for some purposes;  As an exception, personality of a fetus should be restrictively construed and it is applicable only in certain circumstances;
  • 54. Cont’d… The circumstance generally revolves around the interest of the unborn child;  The law has invented this fiction only for the purpose of enabling the child (if it is born) to take a benefit in all matters affecting its interest;  This conception is based on the justification that a child who has already lost its father while being in its mother's womb should not be subjected to further pain of losing a benefit which it would have secured had it been born before its father's death;
  • 55. Cont’d… So, when there is an interest of the baby at stake, the unborn baby in the womb should be regarded as already born and should be allowed to take advantage of the interest;  The granting of personality to a fetus is subject to compliance with three cumulative requirements; According to Art 2 of the Ethiopian Civil Code, “a child merely conceived is considered as though born where its interest so requires provided it is born alive and viable”;  Thus, the three conditions are: the interest of the child must justify the grant of personality, the child must be born alive, and it must be viable;
  • 56. Cont’d… These conditions are cumulative in the sense that the missing of one suffices to deny the fetus personality; In most cases, the interest of the unborn baby comes into the fore where a father dies before the birth of the child leaving behind property;  If a baby has to wait until birth to acquire personality, i.e. if Art 1 of the Civil Code is strictly applied, it will definitely lose the succession to its father's property because succession constitutes a juristic act and being a beneficiary when it opens necessarily requires personality;
  • 57. Cont’d…  Opening of succession is legally made at the death of the father and the property would devolve upon those having the capacity and the right to succeed at such time;  It is to be noted here that the merely conceived baby will be given personality (before birth) only for the purpose of the particular interest that called for the personality;  That means an unborn child would be recognized as person only to benefit from the interest at hand, and it has to wait until birth to acquire personality for all other juridical acts;
  • 58. Cont’d…  Acquisition of personality for a particular interest does not entitle one to exercise it across the board, and in effect personality at conception is significantly reduced; Besides the interest of the child, there remain two conditions: alive birth and viability;  In order to be considered as a person, the baby must be born alive so much so that, for instance, personality will never be granted if the fetus is legally aborted;  Viability refers to the ability to live or the potential of surviving;
  • 59. Cont’d… This is to exclude from the ambit of personality impotent newly born babies or those incapable of surviving because of some congenital factors; The law takes certain presumptions to settle questions of what baby is viable and what is not;  The law irrebutably presumes that a child that lives for 48 hours after its birth is viable, so that no contrary evidence can be admitted to disprove this presumption;  The law also provides for another presumption in the negative that a child that dies before 48 hours after its birth is deemed to be not viable (Art. 4 of the civil code);
  • 60. Cont’d… But this presumption is rebuttable in that it can be shown to the contrary by proving the child was viable;  But we cannot challenge the non-viability of the child by using deficiency in constitution as evidence;  That is to say, if a child dies before 48 hours following its birth due to a disease he caught in its mother's womb or due to other congenital biological deficiencies, it will be conclusively deemed not viable;
  • 61. Cont’d… However, external factors that may have caused the death of the child before 48 hours can be used to disprove the presumption of non-viability;  If, for instance, the baby dies on the 43rd hour after its birth because of mishandling by nurses or by hunger or due to a car accident that occurred while it was being taken home from hospital, all such can be employed to challenge the above presumption by proving that the baby would not have died had it not been for the extraneous factors..
  • 62. Cont’d… 4) Capacity and Incapacity of Physical Persons Capacity is a natural consequence of being recognized as a person before the law and it refers to the authority to enjoy and exercise rights and duties by oneself;  However, even if personality is a necessary condition for capacity, it is not a sufficient one to enable one to personally carry out juridical acts and certain conditions may incapacitate an individual still possessing personality;  Capacity or incapacity is usually thought of regarding two aspects—holding rights and duties, and exercising rights and duties;
  • 63. Cont’d… The principle governing the holding of rights and duties by physical person is that as soon as personality begins all rights and duties are held by an individual;  This means that as far as the holding or enjoyment of rights is concerned, capacity is not only the rule but an absolute rule;  It can be inferred from Art. 1 of the Civil Code that entitlement to rights and duties under the civil law belongs to all individuals by the fact of birth without any other condition attached to such holding;
  • 64. Cont’d… Capacity is the rule even in the case of exercising rights and duties a physical person holds;  Since holding rights and duties is meaningless without the authority to exercise same, the full exercise of rights and duties in principle coincides with their holding;  In the same way that all physical persons enjoy rights and duties, they are capable of exercising the same by themselves;  But in certain circumstances it deems compelling, the law may explicitly declare that person is considered incapable to exercise rights and duties;
  • 65. Cont’d… Since capacity is presumed in the exercise of rights and duties (incapacity is very exceptional), the burden of proving the existence of incapacity falls on the party who claims the incapacity;  Thus, in all acts of civil life physical persons may be assumed that they are dealing with equals who not only hold but also exercise the same rights and duties as theirs;
  • 66. Cont’d… A physical person may be exceptionally enjoined from personally exercising rights and duties because of existence of certain conditions expressly recognized by the law;  But even in such case, the prohibition is not total, i.e. the person is not prohibited from exercising rights and duties altogether but only his personal exercise is disallowed; He or she can still exercise rights and duties through another person by way of representation;  So, the effect of incapacity in exercising rights and duties is that the exercise would be entrusted to a third person;
  • 67. Cont’d… Let’s now see in brief the legally prescribed conditions of incapacity and their corresponding representation institutions;  Some of the conditions are protective of the interests of the incapable person (e.g. minority, judicial interdiction) while others are either preventive or punitive of certain conduct (e.g. foreign citizenship, legal interdiction); a) Minority: - Minority in civil law is an incapacitating condition that occurs because of age; A person below the age of 18 years is called a minor and is incapable of exercising rights and duties by him/herself;
  • 68. Cont’d… The law intends that these persons have immature intellectual faculty and lack the proper degree of appreciation when they transact acts of civil life; The law interferes to protect minors from exploitation by others; Accordingly, any civil act undertaken by the minor without authority is subject to invalidation; A minor may, however, validly perform acts of daily life, i.e. simple and small matters that are quite frequently done and that do not significantly affect the legal position of the minor; There are two institutions of representation recognized by the law to exercise rights and duties on
  • 69. Cont’d… One is guardianship, which is entrusted with the task of running the personality affairs of the minor;  Personality interests include food, clothing, shelter, and schooling, and generally refer to the proper physical and psychological well being and growth of the minor; The guardian is responsible for such interests of the child. The other representative institution is the office of tutorship; Tutor is answerable for the protection and management of the minor's economic (pecuniary) interests such as securing income, investing same, running business, administering property and the like;
  • 70. Cont’d…  Tutor is answerable for the protection and management of the minor's economic (pecuniary) interests such as securing income, investing same, running business, administering property and the like; The incapacity arising as a result of minority may terminate through a couple of ways;  A minor obviously assumes capacity to exercise rights and duties him/herself when he/she attains the age of majority (18 years); The incapacity of a minor may also come to an end through emancipation even if the person is still below the age of eighteen;
  • 71. Cont’d… A minor may conclude marriage in exceptional circumstances approved by the appropriate public body, and we call this situation emancipation; This phenomenon suffices to end the incapacity of the minor and releases him/her from the authorities of the guardian and the tutor; b) Judicial Interdiction: -  This is a court judgment that declares a person as incapable because of mental conditions;  The law steps in to protect the interests of persons with deteriorated mental functioning as a consequence of insanity, infirmity, senility and the like;
  • 72. Cont’d… Insane persons are believed to be unable to understand the nature and consequences of their actions because they have got a mental disease;  Infirm persons are those with serious physical deformities so that such deformities will have the ultimate substantial reduction in mental functioning;  For example, if a person is simultaneously deaf-mute and blind, he/she is deemed to be infirm;  Senility is deterioration in mental faculty because of old age;  The court can declare the interdiction of the above persons with mental deficiencies;
  • 73. Cont’d…  Judicially interdicted persons will lose the authority to exercise rights and duties as of the date of their interdiction; But they, just like minors, exercise rights and duties they hold through guardians if the interest pertains to the personality of the incapable and through tutors where the interest is a proprietary one; Note that the offices of guardian and tutor have certain general features in cases of both minority and judicial interdiction; The offices are compulsory – it is a civil duty to become a tutor or a guardian and no consent is needed;
  • 74. Cont’d…  The offices are in principle non-remunerative; A guardian or a tutor gives the service for free; The tutor/guardian must be a capable person;  It is clear that an incapable person cannot exercise representing others rights and duties that he/she cannot personally exercise; The essence of the distinction between the offices of guardianship and tutorship is the type of activity undertaken and it does not mean that two different persons should hold the offices;
  • 75. Cont’d…  Both functions can be assumed by a single person; The offices are strictly personal in the sense that they cannot be delegated to the exercise of third party or they cannot be transferred to next of kin through inheritance; c) Legal interdiction: -  This is an incapacity imposed by the law;  A person will be legally interdicted as a result of the pronouncement of a legally prescribed punishment for the violation of criminal law;
  • 76. Cont’d…  The prescribed sentence will deny the person the capacity to carryout economic affairs; A legally interdicted person retains capacity over his personality interests and thus no guardian is necessary;  A tutor may represent the legally interdicted person to exercise the latter’s pecuniary rights/duties;  The assumption of the office of tutorship is, unlike that of minority or judicial interdiction, voluntary;  The evident reason is that a person who lost his privilege because of commission of a crime should not be favored by compelling others to assume the role of tutorship on his behalf;
  • 77. Cont’d… d) Foreign Nationality: -  This is a special incapacity because a person is prevented from exercising specified categories of rights;  For instance, the law states that a foreigner c a n n o t t a k e p a r t i n g o v e r n m e n t a l administrations;  Likewise, a foreigner cannot (whether personally or through an agent) own an immovable in Ethiopia, nor can he enter certain investment fields reserved to Ethiopians;
  • 78. Cont’d… 5)Termination of Physical Personality Article 1 of the Ethiopian Civil Code also provides for the way personality of individuals ends;  It states that human person is the subject of rights from birth to death, meaning personality ends at death;  In this case too, natural death and legal death of a person are co-existent; Declaration of absence can, through interpretation, also result in termination of physical personality;
  • 79. Cont’d… The law says that if a person's whereabouts are not known for a certain period defined by the law (two years), a judicial declaration of absence having the effect of death for all legal purposes may be made;  Among the effects of death are found the opening of succession of the person and the remarriage of her/his spouse;  But most importantly, absence with an effect of death will end personality of the absence;
  • 80. Ch-III: Law of Contracts Contracts are matters of daily life especially in commerce;  Thus, the knowledge of fundamental principles of contract law is of much help in commercial success; 1) Some Remarks on Obligations  There are all sorts of obligations imposed upon human beings: moral, religious or social obligations;  In the area of social obligations, a special category is that of legal obligations which will have a binding effect as opposed to the category known as natural obligations that are not compulsory or
  • 81. Cont’d… Legal obligations can be further split into penal and civil obligations;  The specific concern here is with civil obligations existing between private citizens;  Civil obligation is a general reference to juridical acts having distinct legal effects that exist between two or more persons in their private relationships concerning something that one party must undertake towards the other party;
  • 82. Cont’d… A civil obligation consists of a juridical relation between two persons, of whom the one entitled to demand performance on the obligation is called creditor and the one who is obliged to perform is called debtor;  Thus, the obligation and its correlative right take the name of debt and credit respectively;  One of the parties occupies the active position of creditorship and the other assumes the passive status of debtorship;
  • 83. Cont’d… Every obligation has a corresponding right, but the nature of the right that corresponds to a civil obligation and enjoyed by the creditor is particularly a personal right, i.e., it is a right against a designated person(s) or a defined class of persons, as opposed to real rights which are enforceable against any one at all;
  • 84. Cont’d… An obligation exists between persons, be they physical or artificial, while a real right involves the association of a person with a thing and the person can pursue this thing into whosever hands it falls; The sources of Binding obligations are generally law and contract;  In contract, the will of the parties forms the basis of the obligation; in the absence of a contract, an obligation cannot arise except by virtue of the law and therefore all non-contractual obligations have the law as their sole source;
  • 85. Cont’d… The obligations originating exclusively from the law may be further founded on civil wrongs or unjust enrichment;  Thus, obligations usually emerge contractually by the natural agreement of the parties and by the law when the legislator provides so in particular cases of torts and unjust enrichment;  But it is beyond the scope of this study to discus non-contractual obligations and our focus is on contractual obligations only;
  • 86. Cont’d… 2) Essential Notions of Contracts  It is important to be introduced with certain fundamental quasi-philosophical concepts of contracts including the definition given by the Ethiopian law;  The Ethiopian Civil Code, a systematized legislative document covering substantial areas of the civil law, is predominantly influenced by the Romano-Germanic civil law tradition;  Accordingly, it shares much of the jurisprudential aspects of this super legal tradition particularly in the area of contacts;
  • 87. Cont’d… The Civil Code's draftsmanship with a Romano- Germanic jurisprudential background has established in contractual matters the theory of the autonomy of will; This theory derives from the philosophy of economic liberalism, and embodies three major consequences: 1)Contractual Freedom:  there is no obligation to contract; the contracting parties are free to determine the scope of their contract; there is no special form for contracts because consent is sufficient;
  • 88. Cont’d… 2) Enforceability of contracts:  A contract has the force of a law between parties;  The contract is compulsory even for the judge as he has to decide disputes by referring solely to the provisions stipulated by the parties in their contract; 3)The relative effect of contracts:  A contract has no bearing on third parties, or parties outside that contractual engagement are unaffected;
  • 89. Cont’d… Contract is a binding agreement;  It is a promise or set of promises for the breach of which the law gives a remedy, or the performance of which the law in some way recognizes as a duty;  A comprehensive definition incorporating important elements is given under Art. 1675 of the Ethiopian Civil Code;  It states “a contract is an agreement whereby two or more persons as between themselves create, vary or extinguish obligations of a proprietary nature”;
  • 90. Cont’d… The contractual elements that emerge out from dissecting the definition and other related issues are stated below; A) Contracts are agreements  they are based on compulsory exchange of consent;  There must be an agreement as to every aspect of the contract, and this agreement must be meant to be legally binding;  Conversely, there are agreements which do not give rise to a legal bond and therefore not contracts;
  • 91. Cont’d… For instance, acts of courtesy, a ‘‘gentlemen’s agreement’’, a free performance of service, or even a consensual relationship between neighbors to help each other, are not contracts even if they are agreements; Therefore, we can conclude that while all contracts are agreements, the vice versa is not true; B) A contract needs at least two persons for its existence  there cannot be a one-one contract;  The contract is not a unilateral legal instrument which is an expression of a single person's wishes;
  • 92. Cont’d… Such matters as a will drawing an order of succession, the acknowledgement of a natural child, or the resignation made by an employee are all unilateral expressions of a person's intention to generate juridical obligations;  But, none of these are contracts because a contract cannot emerge by a single person's actions;  Contracts are bi-party juridical acts that exist between two persons to the minimum;
  • 93. Cont’d… C) Privity  a fundamental aspect of contractual liberty is the concept of privity of contracts; This is the principle of relative effect of contracts so much so that third parties are not concerned by the contracts made by other persons;  The phrase “as between themselves” in the definitional provisions of the Ethiopian Civil Code reveals the concept in that it is only parties to a contract who are entitled to the benefits or burdened with the liabilities that arise from the contract, and not third parties;
  • 94. Cont’d… In this regard, a contract is distinguishable from other collective legal instruments which may be imposed on persons who did not take part in them;  A decision taken by a general assembly of shareholders, for instance, does create a binding obligation on the shareholders of the company through the operation of the majority rule even though they had opposed the obligation;  The basis of a contractual obligation is the equality of the parties, an important aspect of which is its affirmation of individual liberties;
  • 95. Cont’d… Thus, the right to enter into a contract is also the right not to enter into a contract; D) The object of contracts is the establishment and performance of an obligation an obligation is a legal tie (as defined previously), an action of being bound by a duty, and here it is a freely imposed or accepted duty; Being the instrumentality of establishing a legal bond, entering into a contract entitles the contracting parties to claim the assistance of public force, in the guise of the courts and their officials, to obtain the performance of this contract;
  • 96. Cont’d… E) Contracts can be concluded for the creation, variation and extinguishment of obligations: An obligation may be created anew, may be amended in the course of its performance, and finishes one day;  These three purposes can be achieved by entering into a contract in each case;  The parties can, through the instrumentality of contracts, not only create legal bonds that had not existed before but also vary existing contracts between them or, if they want to, can totally extinguish obligation that had previously been in existence;
  • 97. Cont’d… F)Contracts strictly speaking only concern proprietary, or better, patrimonial issues: They are legal means of modifying economic positions of persons – that is why the law regards contracts as concerned with ''obligations of a proprietary nature'‘;  Thus, agreements in respect of personal status, such as consent to marriage, divorce, or filiations, are not contracts because they are not pecuniary matters in their strict sense;
  • 98. Cont’d… Agreements regarding personality obey different, special legal regimes; It does not mean that certain patrimonial obligations do not derive from such status-bound situations, such as the payment of alimony;  But it means that they are not governed by the general law of contracts;
  • 99. Cont’d… 3) Formation of a Contract  contracts emerge out of the free will of the contractants;  But, it may be the case that such free will would be exercised improperly so that the economic interest that is the subject matter of a contract may be prejudiced;  A party may enter into a contract because the other party may have improperly induced him to do so;
  • 100. Cont’d…  So, there are two interests at stake here: 1) one is that free will must be reasonably made and must be legitimate in the circumstances; 2) the other is that the formed contract should be enabled to produce the economic effect it was intended for;  A striking balance between the interests is reached by the law through the imposition of certain non-derogable requirements in contractual undertakings;
  • 101. Cont’d…  There is a vested interest for the law, being cognizant of the possibility of abuse or prejudice of freedom to contract and of the significance of contracts as instruments of economic performance, to intervene in contractual affairs and set certain standards;  The law regulates contracts in two ways;  Firstly, there are provisions of the law that are deemed mandatory-regarding formation of contracts from which contracting parties cannot deviate because of the need to ensure the free exercise of contractual liberty and due to public policy reasons;
  • 102. Cont’d…  On the other hand, the law provides for permissive rules that serve the purpose of filling the gap that may be left by the contracting parties– parties are free to determine whatever they like on such regard but the law steps in so as to fulfill the contract should the parties fail to do so;  Accordingly, the law has regarded formative requirements as essential and, therefore, compulsory upon the parties to comply with;
  • 103. Cont’d… Article 1678 of the Ethiopian Civil Code states that no valid contract shall exist unless:- the parties are capable of contracting and give their consent sustainable at law; the object of contract is sufficiently defined, and is possible and lawful; the contract is made in the form prescribed by law, if any. Four mandatory conditions are evident in the provision above:  capacity,  consent,  object and  formality;
  • 104. Cont’d…  Article 1678 of the Ethiopian Civil Code states that no valid contract shall exist unless:-  the parties are capable of contracting and give their consent sustainable at law;  the object of contract is sufficiently defined, and is possible and lawful;  the contract is made in the form prescribed by law, if any; Four mandatory conditions are evident in the provision above: I) capacity II) object and III) consent, IV) formality, if required;
  • 105. Cont’d 1) Capacity-though a person is subject to rights and d u t ie s f ro m b i r t h to d e a t h, t h e re a re limitations(incapacities-general/special) on certain category of persons to conclude contract;  Minor, Judicial/legal interdicted person and Infirm persons; 2) Consent  It is expressed in the form of offer and acceptance;  offer and acceptance may be communictaed through oral, written, signal(gusture-nodding head, shaking hands, hammering down in an auction etc/object) and by conduct-earnest etc(Art.1681)
  • 106. Cont’d…  Offer is binding on the offeror only if it is addressed to a specified person, so advertisement is no an offer to avoid multiple acceptance which is creates inconvenience to determine the binding acceptance;  A party making an offer cannot change his opinion;  An offeror who changes his offer partially or totally is liable for any material damage on the offeree;  It is binding if the offer reaches to the oferee;  He can withdraw it before it reaches to the offeree to make his offer not binding;
  • 107. Cont’d… Consent through acceptance-a positive acceptance to an offer; Acceptance is a declaration of intention to be bound by each and every contents of the offer; The offeree may have three possible answers to the offer: “Yes” answer, “No” answer, Acceptance with reservation/having reservations or alternative proposals to some of the contents of the offer;
  • 108. Cont’d If acceptance is made with reservation or alternative proposal, the offeree will take the position of the previous offeror (Art.1690);  Unless the offeror determines the only way of communication, acceptance can be made orally, in w r i t i n g , b y s i g n , e l e c t r o n i c m e d i a , o r conduct(performing the offered obligations partly or wholly);  However, the offeree is not duty bound to accept or even to respond/no silent amounts to acceptance/(Art. 1682);
  • 109. Cont’d Exceptions to Art. 1682:  If there is duty to accept(Art.1683-silence= acceptance)-e.g., provider of public goods or services (Art 1690/91), private enterprise having contract of concession(Arts 3207- 3243), if there is contractual obligation to accept an offer(Arts. 1711, 1957);  Pre-existing contractual relation, silence amounts to acceptance where:  The offer is to vary, supplement or complement the pre-existing contract;
  • 110. Cont’d  The offer is made in writing on special document;  It contains warning that silence amounts acceptance; Defect in consent  it occurs when acceptance or offer do not indicate what the offeror/offeree really intended; causes of defect  wrong information(mistake-about the content or identity, false statement-, fraud), threat (duress reverential fear, threat to exercise rights);
  • 111. Cont’d…  It causes for invalidation if a mistaken party demands it so(1808); Mistake  it must be fundamental-(about the object/nature- e.g., loan contract for donation/identity);  It must be decisive- a rational person would not have entered into the contract had it not been the mistake (Art.1699, 1697);  Fraud (Art.1704)-intentional act of preparing false information or changing or modifying the content of the subject matter of the contract in a manner that cannot be noticeable by ordinary observation;
  • 112. Cont’d It is not telling untruth rather making things/documents to give wrong information; A defrauded party can claim invalidation where: The fraud led him to commit a decisive error(had not been fraud, no contract at all);  the fraud was committed by the party to the contract or he knew or should have known the fraud or drived undue benefit; False Statement(Art.1705)- it is untrue statement made intentionally, being indifferent whether it is true or false, or negligently;
  • 113. Cont’d Misleading or silence amounts to false statement(Art 1705); In principle, false statement is not a ground for invalidation of contract, except:  There is special relationship b/n the lier contracting party and the mistaken party;  The relationship should be legally recognized which creates duty to trust(moral/legal) one another;  Such special relationship led the mistaken party to believe the statements of the other party;
  • 114. Cont’d…  Threat-a person may be threatened physically or psychologically to make an offer or accept the offer.  Duress(Art.1706, 1707)- warning a party that unless he enters into a certain contract, certain harm will follow. Duress resulted in invalidation of contract if:  There is a threat or warning to cause harm-there should be real/express threat;  The harm is on the person himself, spouse or his ascendant or descendant;  The harm is on person, life, property, and honor;
  • 115. Cont’d…  The party believes that the harm will happen if he does not consent to the contract;  The threat should be serious;  The harm is imminent;  The threat must impress a reasonable person;  Re ve re n t i a l f e a r ( u n d u e i n f l u e n ce ) - (ascendant/superior) it is a psychological intimidation that if the person does not give his consent to be bound by the contract, he will be belittled by some one or the public in general;
  • 116. Cont’d For reverential fear, which is presumed to cause invalidation of the contract, it must be: It must make the person to lose certain advantages; The loss must go to the benefit of the person who is the source of reverential fear; 3) Objects of contract it is where parties actually undertake; It is the obligations of both parties; It may be to do, not to do or to give; So object of contract is an agreement between the parties to do, not to do or to give something;
  • 117. Cont’d  There is freedom of contract by which parties can determine the content of their contract(Art 1712);  However, it is practically impossible to specify all the possible contents of the contract; hence, the best approach is to follow the golden rule “do unto others what you want others do unto you”(Art.1713);  Hence, in case there is a dispute, the court would refer good faith, equity, custom and law;  But, parties, are expected to clearly indicate their respective obligation;
  • 118. Cont’d Freedom of contract, however, is not absolute;  So, under Ethiopian Law, freedom of contract is subject to:  Clarity of objects (Art.1714)-it must be ascertained with sufficient precision (object must be defined);  Possibility of object(Art.1715)- no humanly impossible object;  Legality of the object(Art.1716), e.g., contract to kill some one;  Morality of the object(Art.1716)-may not be illegal but immoral, e.g., prostitution contract;
  • 119. Cont’d 4) Form of contract  it is the way in which the content of the contract exists or appears to others; It answers the question how third parties, including a court ; So a contract may exist either in written or oral form; The law gives the freedom to the parties to choose a particular form(written or orally); But, freedom of form is not absolute—it can be limited by law or offer(1682/2/);
  • 120. Cont’d… The limitation may be for evidentiary value, the necessity of recalling the content and indication of intention to create legal relation; Hence, the following contracts must be made in written form: Contracts relating to immovable (Art. 1723); Contracts with public administration (Art.1724) as public officials may leave the office there should be written document; Oral contract is also open for corruption;  Contract of insurance and contract of guarantee (Art. 1725);
  • 121. Cont’d  Once parties agree to make it in writing, it is not complete till the form is fulfilled(Art.1726);  If agreed to make it in writing, its change must be made in writing as well(Art.1722);  When parties or the law requires a contract to be made in writing, failure to comply the form makes the contract a mere draft(Art.1720); 
  • 122. Cont’d Effects of Elements of contract- (consent, object, capacity and form) Any contract that miss these elements are either void or voidable; Void contract is void abinitio, no effect at all as if it doesn’t exist; Both voidable and void contracts have the effect of invalidation; However, invalidation of voidable contract has retroactive effect so that denying the contract to produce any obligation from the moment of its inception;
  • 123. Cont’d… Reinstatement is made either by returning by the payment (thing) received or by paying appropriate compensation for the thing that cannot be returned; A party, in void/voidable contract, should repay it;  Effect of contract- the two major principles are: freedom and sanctity of contracts;  Sanctity of contract-refers that parties are bound by their agreement/ based on the moral principle of pacta sunt servanda;  A contract is also legally binding, if not it is not a contract(Art.1679);  A contract is a law between/among parties (Art.1731);
  • 124. Cont’d It is a law, it should be performed, and violating a c o n t r a c t e n t a i l s p u n i s h m e n t ( n o n - performance=>payment of damages); Performance of contracts- It refers to fulfilling one’s own obligation as agreed;  Who should perform? Art 1740(2): • The debtor ; • By His agent; • by a person authorized by court (curator, ); • by law ( tutors, liquidators, trustees);
  • 125. Cont’d Sometimes the creditor may insist that the debtor himself should perform the obligation(Art.1740(1)); This is when the contract or law expressly provides that the debtor shall perform the contract personally; Where personal performance becomes necessary and when the creditor proves that personal performance is essential to him(when the obligation is to do- professional work); Who may receive payment? Payment should normally be made to the creditor or his agent (Art.1741);  Payment may be made to a tutor, liquidator, trustee (Art. 1741);
  • 126. Cont’d Payment to unqualified person is invalid, except(Art.1743): Payment benefited the real creditor even without his knowledge or express will (e.g., paying the debt of the creditor); Payment confirmed-even if he is not benefited from the payment—such confirmation has the effect of ratifying an act done without authority;
  • 127. Cont’d Performance where to be made: place of performance has implications on cost of payment, currency for money debt, and jurisdiction of courts; The civil code provides three alternatives:  Agreed place;  place where the thing situates at the time of conclusion of contract(if the thing is definite thing);  Residence of the debtor (Art.1755/2/), the law exempts the debtor from transport cost, inconveniences, waste of working hours;
  • 128. Cont’d…  However, the debtor may have more than one residence, so place of performance is the principal residence as provided in Art.1775(2) by the word “normal”; Performance when to be made? Time of performance is important to: Determine transfer of risk; Cost of maintenance and preservation; To claim damage for non-performance;
  • 129. Cont’d Hence, time of performance may be- Agreed time (Art.1756(1)); If no agreed time, when the debtor(1756(2)) or creditor (1756(3)) demands performance; But, in the following cases, the debtor can postpone performance time indefinitely (Arts.1757 and 1759); Simultaneous performance; Anticipatory breach of contract;  It is when the debtor informs the creditor before the debt is due that he (debtor) will not perform his obligation (Art.1757(2));  It is implied from the conduct of the debtor or from
  • 130. Cont’d If there is a reasonable suspicion that one party may not discharge his future obligation, the other party is not bound to carryout his obligation; Anticipatory breach under Art 1757(2)is invoked when time of performance of both sides of the obligation has already determined by contract and the party claiming anticipatory breach is duty bound to perform his obligation earlier than the party who has intended to breach the contract; In short, anticipatory breach is a justification to refuse performance, whereas under Art.1789, it is used as a justification to cancel the contract;
  • 131. Cont’d Anticipatory breach (Art 1788) should be express and if implied, default notice should be given; Insolvency-when a person is declared bankrupt, all his future debts mature on the day he is declared bankrupt (Art.1868); So he has to pay all his future debts on the date he is declared bankrupt; But, bankruptcy should be legal, not factual; Non-performance of Contracts and its remedies 1) Non-performance  According to Art.1731, a contract lawfully formed is a law among the parties;
  • 132. Cont’d…  So, parties should discharge their obligations;  Non-performance, however, refers to parties’ failure to perform contractual obligations in conformity with the terms of the contract and the law (breach of the contract);  It may be total/partial;  Non-performance affects the interest of other party, hence it should be remedied;  Remedies include:  forced performance;  cancellation of the contract;  in addition claim damage be made good;
  • 133. Cont’d  However, before resorting to remedy, a victim party shall put the other party in default by giving notice(Art.1772);  Default notice is demanding the debtor to perform his/her obligation within a certain time limit;  It should be reasonable and should fix a period of time after the expiry of which he will not accept performance of the contract;  Exception to the rule (Art.1775)- The obligation is to refrain from certain acts; The period of time in which the debtor is assumed to perform expired;
  • 134. Cont’d… The debtor has declared in writing that he would not perform his obligation; It is agreed in the contract that notice shall not be required and the debtor shall be in default upon the expiry of the time fixed;  Forced/specific performance It refers to compelling of the debtor to discharge his obligation personally; But, specific performance cannot be ordered unless it is of special interest to the party requiring it and it can be enforced without affecting the personal liberty of the debtor;
  • 135. Cont’d  Special interest- the importance of the obligation required to be discharged towards the creditor and no possibility of being discharged otherwise;  Substituted performance- in addition to forced performance, the law provides substituted performance, through court authorization, as remedy for non-performance(Art.1777 and 1778) which is made at the expense and cost of the debtor:  Art. 1777-Obligation to do or not to do  Art.1778-substituted performance in respect of obligation to deliver fungible things;
  • 136. Cont’d Cancellation-another remedy for non-performance;  Cancelation vs. Invalidation  While invalidation is making the contract ineffective through court authorization, Cancelation is a remedy for non-performance either by a court or unilaterally;  judicial cancellation-as a rule, cancellation can be made by a court ,but not all non-performance leads to cancellation rather the court looks into good faith of the parties(Art.1785);  Unilateral cancellation-it is cancellation of contract without resorting a court;
  • 137. Cont’d Unilateral cancellation is possible:  If agreed time is provided;  When the debtor failed to honor certain time limits (Art.1770) (after lapse of period of grace), Art.1774(after lapse of default notice), and Art. 1775(obligations that must be discharged within the time fixed);  Where performance becomes impossible (Art.1788)-a party may cancel a contract even before the obligation of the other party is due where the performance by the other party of his obligations has become impossible or is hindered so that the essence of the contract is affected;
  • 138. Cont’d…  Anticipatory breach of the contract(Art.1789):  When a party informs the other in an equivocal manner that he will not carryout his obligation;  The party who intends to cancel shall make the other in default, and no cancellation if the other produce securities after default notice;  Notice is not however required if the party informs the other, in writing, that he will not perform his obligation;
  • 139. Cont’d Damages/compensation(Art.1771(2))-another, but additional or alternative (Art.1790), remedy for non- performance of contract; Its purpose is to put the victim party in a position he would have been had the contract been performed; The amount of damages should be equivalent to the damage done(Arts.1799-1805); Defense of damage-  Though not in principle, the existence of fault/grave fault on the part of the creditor can be a defense(Art.1795/1796);
  • 140. Cont’d…  Force majeure(Art. 1791)- “the debtor shall not be released unless he can show that performance was prevented by force majeure”;
  • 141. Ch IV: Contract of Sale Selling and buying are our daily activities;  A contract of sale is a specific/special contract;  A general contract of law will apply if the special contract of sale is silent and when conflict arises between the general and special contracts the latter prevails; Definition of Contract of Sale  (Art.2266)- a contract of sale is “a contract whereby one of the parties, the seller undertakes to deliver a thing and transfer its ownership to another party, the buyer, in consideration of a price expressed in money which the buyer undertakes to pay him.”
  • 142. Cont’d…  It transfers ownership:  Ownership in economic and legal terms represents the fullest right a person would have over a property;  So, it includes the right not only to use the thing but also to demolish, abandon, alienate, or donate that thing;  Sale gives a buyer all such powers;  It is an onerous act:  A contract of sale is not a liberality; It is always made for consideration;  Parties engage in a sale transaction to get some benefit each, not merely to bind themselves to the
  • 143. Cont’d… It is a commutative act:  The contract of sale is bilateral–the obligation it entails is divided between the parties thereto;  The obligation of one party is taken up in consideration of the obligation of the other;  Trading parties and mercantile thing: It is needed that parties to a contract of sale are traders in the sense that they are free from insolvency or bankruptcy risks; They must be worth transacting in commercial terms;  Similarly, the thing that is subject mater of sale must be that within commerce;
  • 144. Cont’d… The thing should be a mercantile one upon which an exchange through legal sale can be effected;  Traditionally, certain things are outside commerce; At the forefront is the human person, this manifests the prohibition of slavery or the sale of one’s own organs;  You can’t sell your child or your limbs for that mater;  It involves the fixing of a price:  A characteristic of the contract of sale is the price– the monetary counterpart of the giving over of the good for sale;
  • 145. Cont’d…  Incidental to this is that the price must be labeled in a legal currency, that it must be certain or ascertainable, and that it must be just–not considerably disproportionate with the value of the good; As a final note, one needs to distinguish a sale contract from certain similar types of exchange modes;  Such contract as hiring sale, supplies, barter, donation, transfer of rights other than ownership, and contract of service should not be confused with sale;
  • 146. Cont’d…  But, if the party to whom delivery to be made provides the essential ingredients for the making of the thing, the contract is best described as service and not sale;  For instance, A wants a full garment. A brought the pieces of textile by his own and hands them over to a tailor to produce the suit. This agreement is not one of sale, but service. Barter is also an onerous contract that is concluded with a view to transfer ownership;  But, there is no monetary price in bartering, and the exchange is made between things’;
  • 147. Cont’d… Price expressed in money terms distinguishes sale from barter;  Donation on the other hand is a contract of gratuity; it is not made for consideration;  One party undertakes the obligation to transfer ownership of a thing to another;  But, sale is a bilateral engagement when it comes to bearing obligations;
  • 148. Cont’d… The transfer of rights other than ownership:  such as usufructs (a right to use and enjoy the fruit, not to alienate) is in essence different from sale;  Usufruct is short of the power to alienate or dispose of a thing, which ownership contains;  In sale, ownership is transferred, not merely usufruct; A contract may be concluded for hiring a thing; The intention is that the thing will be returned back to the lessor;
  • 149. Cont’d…  Contract of sale is also different from a contract of supplies, where a party undertakes for a price to make in favor of the other party periodical or continuous deliveries of things;  This contract relates to the delivery, not to the transfer of ownership of a thing;  Price is paid for making the supply;  There are also certain “forms of sale” recognized by law;  They are all forms of sale, but assume different modes:  sale on trial;  sale with ownership reserved; and
  • 150. Cont’d…  Sale on trial:  It is a conditional sale which completes only after the thing is taken by the prospective buyer and tried to be suitable;  If the thing passes the trial, the sale contract becomes intact;  Until the trial is made, ownership resides in the prospective seller and so risk remains with him;  Sale with ownership reserved:  It is a contract whereby the seller reserves to himself the ownership until the buyer pays the price of the thing he has taken possession;
  • 151. Cont’d…  But, until then, the risk is assumed by the buyer, and the seller may take back the thing; Finally, there is a type of sale called sale with right of redemption;  Right of redemption refers to the right the seller exercises to buy the thing back;  Parties can reach agreement so much so that the seller can re-buy the thing he has sold within a defined period of time, usually two years, subject of course to the refund of the appropriate amount of price to the buyer;
  • 152. Cont’d  As a special contract, sale contract involves two distinct parties: buyer and seller; “things, "if it can be appropriated by human beings, is also a definitional element for sale contract which is a subject matter of sale contract; “things” should be understood to mean “goods,” as it is only goods can be possessed and owned;  “goods” is defined under Art.1126 of Ethiopian Civil Code that “all goods are movable or immovable”;
  • 153. Cont’d  (Art.1127)-“things which have material existence and can move themselves or be moved by themselves without losing their individual character are corporal chattels”; Formation of Contract of Sale  In addition to the requirements in special contracts, there must be a satisfaction of requirements under general contract: Consent (offer and acceptance); Sufficient clarity of objects; Lawfulness; Moral;
  • 154. Cont’d The obligation assumed by the buyer is to pay the price fixed; If not expressly determined by the parties, it may be submitted to third party arbitration the rejection/lack of consensus of which results no-sale contract at all; The price can also be determined by taking into account current price or market price; Performance of sale of contract Performance is just to refer discharging the obligations of:  The seller;
  • 155. Cont’d…  Common obligations of both parties (transfer of risks, expenses and preservation of the thing), as imposed by the law, custom, or good faith for the performance of sale contract;
  • 156. Cont’d  Obligations of the seller:  Obligation to deliver the thing-handing over/transfer not only the principal thing but also accessories at agreed time, place , quality and quantity (actual delivery(1140), constructive delivery(1145), symbolic delivery-physical handling of other things that represent the things sold);  If no agreed time, the seller shall deliver the thing as soon as the buyer requires him to do so(Art.2276)—delivery of the thing shall be simultaneous with the payment of the price unless agreed to the contrary;
  • 157. Cont’d  Obligation to transfer ownership;  Obligation to warrant(quality, character or s u i t a b i l i t y ) t h e b u y e r a g a i n s t dispossession(transfer of an assailable rights), defects, and non-conformity:  Warranty is either express(using pictures, drawings, blue prints, or technical specifications, models, samples) or implied(from the law whether the seller made it expressly or not);
  • 158. Cont’d…  Implied warranty is imposed on the seller to set the interest of promoting higher standards in the market for the buyer commonly has little /no opportunity to examine goods carefully before making a decision to buy them;  Buyers are not in a position to test the quality;  The seller/manufacturer of such goods to determine their adequacy and quality;  Warranty of dispossession is not workable where the buyer is:  awareness of the threat of dispossession;
  • 159. Cont’d…  Where it is excluded by agreement;  When the buyer fails to join the seller in the proceeding against him;  When dispossession is due to the act of the buyer; Obligations of the Buyer(Art.2303)- Obligation to pay price; Obligation to take delivery; Other obligation imposed by the contract;  Obligation to pay price-it is the cost at which a thing is bought;
  • 160. Cont’d  The obligation to pay price includes all the necessary preparation by taking the customs and practices of usage(e.g., opening bank account if payment is by check, to give security for the payment, obligation to accept bills of exchange);  What price? What if not clearly determined?  Things at current price/market price,  Quantity greater than the agreed-at the will of the buyer to accept or reject the excess;
  • 161. Cont’d Place of payment-if not fixed, the price should be pied at the place of the seller or at place of delivery if payment and delivery is agreed to be simultaneous; Obligation to take delivery of the thing (Art.2313)-the buyer shall, after delivery, take such steps as may be necessary for completing the delivery of the thing; Transfer of Risk under Contract of Sales of Movables Transfer of risk is important in sale contract; Risk refers to the liability for loss or deterioration of a thing sold;
  • 162. Cont’d The thing sold may be damaged, destroyed or lost; When goods are destroyed at the hands of the buyer, risk is said to be transferred to such buyer; In principle, risk shall be born by the person who is in a better position of avoiding the risk, or shared when none of the parties is in a better position of avoiding the risk; The person who bears the risk is to cover the value of the thing which has been damaged or lost;
  • 163. Cont’d  Under Art.2323 of the Civil Code of Ethiopia, risk is transferred from seller to the buyer where:  Until delivery (Art.1758(1)) the debtor (the seller) bears the risk till);  Delay of the buyer, after put in default for not taking delivery (Art.1758(2));  Generally, risk is transferred when the thing delivered conforms to the terms of the agreement;
  • 164. Ch V: Law of Agency One may not be able to present more than a place at a time; One may not have all the professions/skills on a certain affairs; One may no also be able to perform a certain task due to certain forms of incapacity; Hence, the facts mentioned so far necessitated an individual to be represented for certain activities to be performed in his absence but on his own behalf; So, law of agency facilitates and governs such representations;
  • 165. Cont’d… Rationale of Agency: Reduces the cost of both the principal and 3rd parties; It satisfies the special requirements for professional need of the principal;  It reduces the inconveniences to deal with everything personally; The need to represent legal persons as they have no mind and physical appearance; The need to overcome incapacities(to do juridical acts);
  • 166. Cont’d…  The internal contract- (Formation and Requirements) (Art. 2179)- two sources of agency;  By agreement;  By law By agreement presupposes the existence of two separate contract:  The internal contract (agent and principal);  The main contract(agent and 3rd parties) Agency is one of special contracts, so the elements of valid contracts in general should be satisfied(Art.1678);
  • 167. Cont’d…  Capacity;  Defined object;  Lawful, moral and possible object;  Form, if any,  Scope of authority The scope of power of the agent is determined by internal contract; If not specifically determined, it should be determined based on the nature of the transaction(Art.2202);  Agency may be: special or general(Art.2202(2));
  • 168. Cont’d… General Agency: The power is conferred in general terms (expressed like-all ‘many affairs,’ ‘any thing related to property,’ ‘any affairs which I’m called to perform’); They shall be limited to acts of management on the preservation or maintenance of those affairs or rights of the principal; An agent is empowered only to sustain the rights of the principal not to dispose; Acts of management include:  acts done for the preservation/ maintenance of property;
  • 169. Cont’d… collection of debts; investment of income; discharge of debts; sale of crops;  sale of goods intended to be sold; and sale of perishables;  Special Agency It is d/t from general agency as the agent is empowered to dispose the rights of the principal in special agency;  It is also termed as acts of disposition;
  • 170. Cont’d The agent is to act in a particular transaction, affairs specified in the contract and their natural consequences (Art.2202(2));  The act to be performed by the agent is specifically provided including sale of a house, lease of land etc;  A power in special agency is broader than general agency;  Acts that require special authority:  Alienating/ mortgaging real estate (acts of disposition);  Investing capital (not income);  Signing bills of exchange;  Effecting settlement and consenting to arbitration;  Making donations;  Bringing and defending an action;
  • 171. Cont’d…  Modes of Representation(responding to 3rd parties):  Disclosed agency(“contracts are made by an agent in the name of the principal within the scope of his power is deemed to have been made by the principal”)Art.2189(1);  Partially disclosed agency(an agent is contracting in his own name though the third party knows he is an agent);  Undisclosed agency(neither the name nor the status of the agent is disclosed);  Only disclosed agency do have the effect of agency;
  • 172. Cont’d…  Duties of the agent(arising from agreement, law and incidental) are:  Performance- since it is contract, it should be performed;  Duty to protect the interest of the principal, including avoiding conflict of interest; Conflict of interest may occur:  When the agent contracts with 3rd parties;  When the agent contracts with the principal;  When the agent contracts with himself;
  • 173. Cont’d…  (Art. 2209)an agent should act to the exclusive interest of the principal and should not drive any benefit without the knowledge of the principal;  Diligence required from him-act as a bonus pater familias, with care and maximum skill etc;  Duty to account–he shall account for the principal about his management affairs; shall inform without delay that he has accomplished his agency;
  • 174. Cont’d…  Duties of the principal: Remuneration if the contract is not for gratuitous(Arts. 2219 & 2220); Duty to advance money to the agent for carrying out the agency (Art.2221); Duty to reimburse expenses(Art.2221);  Liabilities of principal, agent and third parties Sometimes the agent may work with a lapsed authority or an authority departed from its terms; In principle, only disclosed agency have the effect between principal and 3rd party; but there are exception when the principal ratifies unauthorized act (Art.2264);
  • 175. Cont’d The agent shall be personally liable to 3rd party in two cases:  Where the agent acted beyond the scope of his power;  And/or the agent acted in his own name unless the third party is aware of the fact;
  • 176. Chapter Six Labour Law  6.1 Sources of Regulation  The sources of labour laws are International and National laws.  Some of the International origins are Forced Labour Convention, ; Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention; Employment Service Convention; right to Organize and Collective Bargaining convention ; A bolition of Forced Labour Convention; Minimum Age Convention; Occupation al Safety and Health Convention; Termination of Employment Convention; an d Private Employment Agencies Convention.  The national origin may be classified into public and private ones.  The public acts include the FDRE Constitution, the Labour Proclamation No 37 7/96 together with its amendments Proclamation No 494/98 and decisions of t he Federal Supreme Court Cassation Bench.  The private acts are instruments of private nature but binding as though they a re law. Thus, strictly speaking they are not law, all the same they are
  • 177. assimilated to law. These are Contracts of employment, Collective agreements and Work rules. The first two instruments are bilateral ones while the third one is a unilateral instrument.  Collective agreement" means an agreement conclu ded in writing between one or more representative of trade unions and one or more employers or agen ts or representatives of employers organizations.
  • 178.  Whereas “work rules" means, subject to the safety and the prevention", of accidents, disciplinary measures and its im plementation as well as other conditions of work.  6.2 SCOPE OF APPLICATION  The labour law is applicable to employment relations based on a contract of em ployment that exist between a worker and an employer except the followings.  contracts for the purpose of upbringing, treatment, care or rehabilitation;  contracts for the purpose of educating or training other than apprentice;  managerial employee who is vested with powers to lay down and execute mana gement policies by law or by delegation of the employer depending on the type of activities of the undertaking with or without the aforementioned powers an i ndividual who is vested with the power to hire, transfer, suspend,
  • 179. lay off, assign or take disciplinary measures against employees and include legal service head who recommend measures to be taken by the employer regarding managerial issues by using his independent judgment in the interest of the employer;  contracts of personal service for non-profit making pu rposes;  contracts relating to persons such as members of the Armed Force, members of the Police Force, employees of state administration, judges of courts of law, pro secutors and others whose employment relationship is governed by special law s;  contracts relating to a person who performs an act, for consideration, at his ow n business or professional responsibility.
  • 180. 6.3 Formation of Contract of Employment  6.3.1 The Element of a Contract of Employment  A contract of employment is formed where a person agrees directly or indirectl y to perform work for and under the authority of an employer for a definite or i ndefinite period or piece work in return for wage.  It shall be stipulated clearly and in such manner as that the parties are left with no uncertainty as to their respective rights and obligations under the terms the reof; and  it shall specify the type of employment and place of work the rate of wages, met hod of calculation thereof, manner and interval of payment and duration of th e contract.  But, it shall not be concluded for the performance of unlawful or immoral activ ities and shall not lay down less favorable conditions for the employee than tho se provided for by law, collective agreement or work rules.
  • 181. 6.3.2 Form of Employment Contract  As regards to forms of contract, the labour law regime in principle does not req uire an special form for contractual validity.  Contract of Employment made in writing shall specify the name and address of the employer; the name, age, address and work card number, if any, of the work er; the agreement of the contracting parties on the type of employment and pla ce of work the rate of wages, method of calculation thereof, manner and interv al of payment and duration of the contract; and the signature of the contractin g parties.  However, where the contract of employment-is not made in written form, the e mployer shall, within 15 days from the conclusion of the contract, give the work er a written and signed statement containing the requirements mentioned abo ve in written form of contract.  If such written statement is not wholly or partly objected to by the worker
  • 182.  within 15 days from the date of receipt, it shall be d eemed a contract of employment concluded betwe en the worker and the employer.  Nevertheless, failure to comply with the elements of written contract and non-reducement of other f orm of contract to written contract does not depriv e the worker of his rights under labour Proclamati on.
  • 183. 6.4 Duration of the Labour Contract  Any contract of employment shall be deemed to have b een concluded for an indefinite period except the for f ollowings contract of employment for definite period or piece work:  the performance of specified piece work for which the employee is employed;  the replacement of a worker who is temporarily absent due to leave or sickness or other causes;  the performance of work in the event of abnormal pre ssure of work; 
  • 184.  the performance of urgent work to prevent damage or disaster to life or property, to repair defects or break do wns in works, materials, buildings or plant of the unde rtaking;  an irregular work which relates to permanent part of t he work of an employer but performed on an irregular intervals;  seasonal works which relate to the permanent part of t he works of an employer but performed only for a speci fied period of the year but which are regularly
  • 185. repeated in the course of the years;  an occasional work which does not form part of the permanent activity of the e mployer but which is done intermittently;  the temporary placement of a worker who has suddenly and permanently vacat ed from a post having a contract of an indefinite period for not more than 45 co nsecutive days;  and the temporary placement of a worker to fill a vacant position in the period between the study of the organizational structure and its implementation for n ot more than 45 consecutive days.  In addition, an employee may be employed for a probation period for the purpo se of testing his suitability to a post in which he is expected to be assigned and such probation period shall be made in writing and shall not exceed 45 consecu tive days.
  • 186. 6.4 Modification of Contract of Employment  Conditions of a contract of employment which are not determined under the labour Proclamation, may be m odified by collective agreement; work rules or written a greement of the parties.  But, amalgamation or division or transfer of ownership of an undertaking shall not have the effect of modifyin g a contract of employment.
  • 187. 6.5 Obligation of the Employer and Employee  6.5.1 Obligations of an Employer  An employer shall in addition to special stipulations in the contract of employment have the following obligati ons:  to provide work to the worker in accordance with the c ontract of employment and to provide him with imple ments and materials necessary for the performance of the work;  to pay the worker wages and other emoluments; to res pect the worker's human dignity;
  • 188.  to take all the necessary occupational safety and healt h measures and to abide by the standards and directive s to be given by the appropriate authorities in respect o f these measures;  to defray the cost of medical examination, of the work er whenever such medical examination is required by l aw or the appropriate authority;  to keep a register of workers particulars; to give the worker a certificate of service upon termination of a contract of em ployment or whenever the worker so requests;
  • 189.  to allow and respect all the leave and rest day of the w orker;  to pay legal payments for lawful termination of work , compensation for unlawful termination ,and disability because of occupational accident and diseases;  and to observe the provisions of this Proclamation, coll ective agreement, work rules, directives and orders iss ued in accordance with law.  It will be unlawful acts to the Employer if he:
  • 190.  impedes the worker in any manner in the exercise of h is rights or take any measure against him because he e xercises his right;  discriminate against female workers, in matters of rem uneration, on the ground of their sex;  terminate a contract of employment contrary to the pr ovisions of the Proclamation;  coerce any worker by force or in any other manner to join o r not to join or to cease to be a member of a trade union or t o vote for or against any given candidate in elections for tra de union offices;
  • 191.  require any worker to execute any work which is hazar dous to his life;  and discriminate between workers on the basis of nati onality, sex, religion, political outlook or any other con ditions.
  • 192. 6.5.2 Obligations of the Workers  Every worker shall have the obligations:  to perform in person the works;  to follow instructions given by the employer based on t he terms of the contract and work rules;  to handle with due care all instruments and tools entru sted to him for work;  to report for work always in fit mental and physical conditions; to give a ll proper aid when an accident occurs or an imminent danger threatens life or property in his place of work without endangering his safety and health;
  • 193.  to inform immediately the employer any act which end angers himself or his fellow workers or which prejudice the interests of the undertakings;  And to observe the provisions of Labour Proclamation, collective agreement, work rules and directives issued i n accordance with the law.  It will also be unlawful acts for the Worker if she:  intentionally commit in the place of work any act whic h endangers life and property;

Editor's Notes

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