it requires consideration - ترجمة إلى ألماني
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it requires consideration - ترجمة إلى ألماني

CONCEPT OF LEGAL VALUE IN CONNECTION WITH CONTRACTS
Nominal consideration; Valuable consideration; Legal consideration; Consideration (law); Consideration doctrine; For value received; Legal detriment; Detriment (law)

it requires consideration      
es erfordert Überlegung
nominal consideration         
symbolische Erwägung (für einen nominellen Betrag um eine Idee auszudrücken)
es erfordert Überlegung      
it requires consideration, it needs thought, it must be thought about, it must be considered

تعريف

Consideration
·noun Thoughtful or sympathetic regard or notice.
II. Consideration ·noun Claim to notice or regard; some degree of importance or consequence.
III. Consideration ·noun That which is, or should be, taken into account as a ground of opinion or action; motive; reason.
IV. Consideration ·noun Attentive respect; appreciative regard;
- used especially in diplomatic or stately correspondence.
V. Consideration ·noun The act or process of considering; continuous careful thought; examination; contemplation; deliberation; attention.
VI. Consideration ·noun The result of delibration, or of attention and examonation; matured opinion; a reflection; as, considerations on the choice of a profession.
VII. Consideration ·noun The cause which moves a contracting party to enter into an agreement; the material cause of a contract; the price of a stripulation; compensation; equivalent.

ويكيبيديا

Consideration

Consideration is a concept of English common law and is a necessity for simple contracts but not for special contracts (contracts by deed). The concept has been adopted by other common law jurisdictions.

The court in Currie v Misa declared consideration to be a “Right, Interest, Profit, Benefit, or Forbearance, Detriment, Loss, Responsibility”. Thus, consideration is a promise of something of value given by a promissor in exchange for something of value given by a promisee; and typically the thing of value is goods, money, or an act. Forbearance to act, such as an adult promising to refrain from smoking, is enforceable only if one is thereby surrendering a legal right.

Consideration may be thought of as the concept of value offered and accepted by people or organisations entering into contracts. Anything of value promised by one party to the other when making a contract can be treated as "consideration": for example, if A contracts to buy a car from B for $5,000, A's consideration is the promise of $5,000, and B's consideration is the promise of the car.

Additionally, if A signs a contract with B such that A will paint B's house for $500, A's consideration is the service of painting B's house, and B's consideration is $500 paid to A. Further if A signs a contract with B such that A will not repaint his own house in any other colour than white, and B will pay A $500 per year to keep this deal up, there is also a consideration. Although A did not promise to affirmatively do anything, A did promise not to do something that he was allowed to do, and so A did pass consideration. A's consideration to B is the forbearance in painting his own house in a colour other than white, and B's consideration to A is $500 per year. Conversely, if A signs a contract to buy a car from B for $0, B's consideration is still the car, but A is giving no consideration, and so there is no valid contract. However, if B still gives the title to the car to A, then B cannot take the car back, since, while it may not be a valid contract, it is a valid gift.

In common law it is a prerequisite that both parties offer consideration before a contract can be thought of as binding. The doctrine of consideration is irrelevant in many jurisdictions, although contemporary commercial litigant relations have held the relationship between a promise and a deed is a reflection of the nature of contractual considerations. If there is no element of consideration found, there is thus no contract formed.

However, even if a court decides there is no contract, there might be a possible recovery under the doctrines of quantum meruit (sometimes referred to as a quasi-contract) or promissory estoppel.