Draft:Pollicitation in French civil law

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The term pollicitation takes its origin from Roman law, where it corresponded to a promise of donation made by a candidate for a municipal magistracy.[1] Nowadays, in French civil law, the solicitation or offer is the fact of proposing the conclusion of a contract.[2]

In a broad sense, the contract offer can simply be a proposal to perform a contract.[3] However, the law makes a distinction between the two expressions, the proposal to contract not being subject to the same legal regime.[a] An offer is a solicitation only if a pure and simple affirmative answer (acceptance), is enough to create a contract between the two parties. In other cases, this offer will be disqualified[b] as a proposal to enter into negotiations[c] or call for tenders.[d]

Indeed, in a strict legal sense, as understood by the French doctrine,[e] the definition is more “narrow”,[4] and designates a firm proposal to conclude, under specific conditions, a contract, in such a manner, that its acceptance is sufficient for its formation.[4][5] However, some authors relativize the distinction between offer and pollicitation, and consider these two terms synonymous, while admitting that pollicitation, understood in the strict sense, has a greater legal force than the offer.[6]

This definition has been taken up in recent legal instruments like article 14, paragraph 1st, of the Vienna Convention of the United Nations of 11 April 1980,[A] the UNIDROIT Principles relating to international commercial contracts[B] and the principles of European contract law.[C] The definition in Common law,[D] and in the Civil Code of Quebec[E] is also substantially identical.

Pollicitation is no longer the only way to conclude a contract: legal practices have evolved, in particular with the development of preliminary contracts,[f] the membership contract[g] or the practice of punctation.[h] The Civil Code refuses, in the name of freedom of contract: whoever is free to make an offer (or not) is also free to withdraw it.[3] Symmetrically, if a condition, which was necessary for the pollicitation to exist, disappears (loss of legal capacity of the contributor, death, etc.), the pollicitation becomes null and void.[12]

The notion of solicitation retains an important practical interest: if there was no real offer, there was no contract, and therefore, no contractual obligation exists between the parties.[13]

Thus, for the French positive law, the pollicitation is a proposal to contract, exteriorized, showing the will to be engaged in the event of acceptance for the essential elements of the future contract.[14] A pollicitation can be withdrawn as long as it is not accepted by the recipient of the offer; otherwise, it is faulty or abusive. Finally, if the pollicitation lapses, if the pollicitant dies or becomes legally incapable, it disappears.[13][15]

Nature of the offer[edit]

The offer to contract is a firm and precise proposal to conclude a specific contract under specific conditions.

According to the preliminary Catalan project, it is a unilateral act determining the essential elements of the contract,[16] that its author proposes at a fixed or indeterminate level, and by which he expresses his will to contract if acceptance.[17]

The offer must be firm, precise and unambiguous.

Required characters[edit]

The offer must have each of these characteristics in order to be legally qualified as pollicitation. These characteristics, without which no pollicitation can exist, are sometimes referred to as “constitutive elements”.[18]

Specific offer[edit]

"A proposal is sufficiently precise when it designates the goods and, expressly or implicitly, fixes the quantity and the price or gives indications making it possible to determine them.

— Article 14-1 of the United Nations Convention on the International Sale of Goods[19]

The French common law of contracts retains a similar idea, although the Vienna Convention is only concerned with special contracts.

According to Pothier, the essential elements are those "without which it would be impossible to know what sort of agreement has been concluded".[20][21] The offer must include the essential elements of the planned contract, i.e. allowing it to be carried out.[22]

However, the determination of the essential elements, which must appear in the offer, and those which may be absent because they are only ancillary, will depend on the contract considered.[22] It is necessary to distinguish, according to the authors,[23] between a contract which would be "named", that is to say which has a legal regime which is specific to it, or which would be unnamed, without a legal regime which can provide additional details.[24]

Named contracts[edit]
Without the indication of the price, the sales contract cannot be formed.

If the contract is named, that is to say that it is specially regulated by a legal text, this text will itself determine what will be the essential elements of the contract. Without the indication of the price, the sales contract cannot be formed.[25]

Thus, the sale, which is a named contract, is “perfect [...] as soon as the thing and the price have been agreed”.[26] It is then not requested, neither that the thing has been delivered, nor that the price has been paid: it is sufficient that the parties agree on these two essential points for the contract to be formed.[27]

For the lease contract, which is also a named contract, the offer must mention the item rented and the amount of the rent.[28]

Nameless contracts[edit]

In this hypothesis, the degree of precision is “rather vague”:[29] if the contract is not named by a special legal text, nothing determines a priori the essential elements of the contract. It is then the judge who will have to determine on a case-by-case basis what will be the essential elements of each contract.[30]

The French Court of Cassation, in a series of case law relating to the problem of the indeterminacy of the price, has also ruled that the “reference to a price” could suffice to give an offer sufficient precision, except for abuse and 'illegitimate profit'.[31][23]

Place left to the parties[edit]

The judge will sometimes have to qualify certain contractual obligations as main, while others will be ancillary.[24] The first will be fundamental so that the contract can be really formed, the second having for object only to determine, in particular, the methods of execution of the first obligations: the accessory obligations are not therefore essential elements of the contract.

Place left to the nature of the contract[edit]

In some contracts, the custom is not to fix the price beforehand, when the contract is formed.[32]

This is particularly the case with business contracts and the power of attorney. Likewise, the proposal of a jeweller who wished to modify the ceiling of his insurance contract, for the “lowest possible” premium was considered sufficiently precise, and therefore deserves the qualification of pollicitation.

Electronic contracts[edit]

Article 1369-4 of the French Civil Code provides that the offer must have a certain content, which falls within the nature of electronic transactions.[33] The electronic offer must therefore include:[33]

  • The technical means allowing the user, before the conclusion of the contract, to identify errors made in entering data and to correct them;
  • The languages ​​offered for the conclusion of the contract;
  • In case of archiving of the contract, the terms of this archiving by the author of the offer and the conditions of access to the archived contract;
  • The means of consulting by electronic means the professional and commercial rules to which the author of the offer intends, if applicable, to abide by.

However, this only concerns consumer law relations, between consumers and professionals, since only professionals who offer “the supply of goods or the provision of services” are obliged to provide an offer with this particular minimum content. It is not in the proper sense of a condition of precision, but of a minimum content, imposed by the legislator; it is a condition of validity of the offer, and not a condition of its existence: the offer by electronic means must always propose the essential elements of the contract.

Firm offer[edit]

The offer must be firm, that is to say, not have been formulated "lightly": the offeror must have intended to be bound by his proposal, to be bound in the event of acceptance.[34] The applicant therefore accepts that the formation of the contract no longer depends on him. If this character is not fulfilled, it will be an invitation to enter into negotiations,[16] in order to initiate a negotiation, on the content of the future contract, and no longer a solicitation.[35]

For example, the proposition to sell a car at a fixed price could be considered as a pollicitation, and its author will be obliged to sell this car to the person who will agree to pay this price immediately, since:

  • the purchaser will not have been decisive (characteristic of an intuitu personae contract);
  • the author of the proposal will not be able to find a legitimate excuse to be bound (if he does not find a legitimate excuse, it could be a refusal to sell; a legitimate excuse will be, for example, manifest insolvency of buyer).

Reservation[edit]

A reservation is a limit placed by the author of a proposal on his will to contract, which may be expressed or implied; it can relate to the very principle of the contract, to the person of the contracting party (for example, classified ads in newspapers), or even to the conditions of the contract (“price to be discussed”). However, the existence of a reserve limits the firmness of the offer, and the doctrine has questioned the reservations which could be compatible with a firm pollicitation, and other reserves which would lead to the disqualification of the pollicitation in invitation to enter into negotiations.

The assessment of the condition of firmness is finally done on a case-by-case basis, taking into account mainly:

  • terms of the proposal, more or less revealing of the scope of the commitment;
  • the recipient of the offer (an offer to a specific person is generally firmer than an offer made to the public)
  • the nature of the contract envisaged (the more a contract is intuitu personæ, that is to say the more the consideration of the person is important, the more it can be assumed that the offeror has reserved the possibility of agreeing to his partner).[36]
Disqualifying reservations[edit]

In principle, any offer which authorizes its author to withdraw it is not a solicitation, but an invitation to enter into negotiations.

It could be an express reservation of approval such as that which indicates that the proposal is "subject to confirmation", the seller retaining, for example, the possibility, after the signature of the buyer, to notify his refusal, or subordinating its commitment to the signature of the managing director of the company: there is no desire to be bound in the event of acceptance, and there is therefore an invitation to enter into negotiations; the recipient of the initial offer is in fact invited to propose a second offer, which may or may not be accepted.

Reservations naturally exist in a contract intuitu personæ. This is the case with the employment contract: the recruiter makes a proposal with sufficiently precise elements, but he reserves the right to approve the person he will recruit and with whom he will contract: he obviously arrogates to himself a right of reserve, legitimate, and is not obliged to hire the first candidate come, even if he satisfies the precise criteria of his offer. The “job offers” that we find in newspapers are therefore not offers, but invitations to enter into negotiations.

In the case of a credit offer, the issuer (a bank, for example) must be able to assess the creditworthiness of the acceptor. In these cases, it is even considered that it is not the one who takes the initiative of the contractual process who will be the initiator, but the one who responded to this advance: it is therefore the one who wishes to be granted a credit that makes an offer.

Non-disqualifying reservations[edit]

Authors often cite the example of an advertisement for the sale of a product "while stocks last": there is indeed a proposal with a reserve, but, nevertheless, it is a pollicitation, because it is a reserve. objective, which does not depend on the will of the solicitor, and in which the arbitrariness of the offeror has no place. As long as the stock is not exhausted, the solicitor must honor the orders he receives.

Irreconcilable offers[edit]

Finally, in the event that several irreconcilable offers come from the same person, the offeror cannot choose, at his own discretion, the one that is most advantageous: this would then be a form of auctioning, then that the recipients of this "offer" (which is in fact only an invitation to propose a counter-offer) do not think they are placed in a situation of competition: the recipients then have the legitimate appearance that they are the only recipients of an offer. It is indeed a condition attached to the firmness of the offer, because the one who makes multiple and irreconcilable offers (such as the proposal for the sale of the same good to several determined persons) does not have the intention of.

Externalized offer[edit]

An example of exteriorization of an offer: signs that give the price of fish for sale.

The offer is necessarily turned towards someone: it is a manifestation of will, which must be brought to the attention of others. There is therefore no pollicitation unless the proposal to contract is externalized, otherwise, no potential contracting party could accept it for want of having been able to know it. The externalization is in principle express: the offeror must externalize his offer, by any means of communication (in writing (letter, catalog, poster, advertisement, message transmitted by telegram, fax or telex), orally, or even by gestures, as can be the case at the stock exchange or at the auction). In application of the doctrine of consensualism , there is no form required for the declaration of the offer. There is therefore at least one positive and unequivocal fact, and no doubt exists, for witnesses to this fact, on the willingness of the offeror to conclude a contract.

Case law also accepts the tacit offer, that is to say the offer which, without being expressed by mere silence, will be deduced from certain facts which are indicative of the intention to contract: one can deduce of a behavior, of an attitude, which means that one offers to contract, even if there is no positive fact, thanks to the law or to a custom.

An abstention can thus induce an intention to contract. For example, article 1738 of the French Civil Code provides that if at the end of the lease contract, the tenant remains in the premises, it is a tacit offer to renew the lease. It is the same in the tacit renewals of contract: on both sides, we deduce from the silence kept that the old contract was satisfactory, and that it is in the interest of each party to continue it; otherwise, a party would have spoken, and would have expressed an intention to break up. We therefore deduce the will to continue from the absence of the intention to break.

This is also the case of a taxi driver who waits at a station, with his light on: he is in a situation of supply, even if the driver does not perform any positive act to make known his intention to contract. This situation of tacit offer is in fact recognized by usage. Usage also authorizes to say that a vending machine in working order is in a position to make an offer.

The tacit qualifier actually means that the will is not formally expressed. When an offer is tacit, it is always express, in the etymological sense, that is to say expressed: silence alone cannot be considered as a proposal to contract, because a silence is equivocal, and does not want anything to express ; to accept silence as a mode of “expression” would be to establish a form of forced contract. Thus, for authors, there is no truly tacit offer, apart from the situation of the tenant who would remain silent.

Indifferent characters[edit]

Recipients of the offer[edit]

The offer can be sent either to one or more specific people (when the offeror writes to one or more individuals to offer them a specific business), or to the public (through posters, catalogs, advertisements, etc.).

In the latter case, they are “collective offers”. We must consider that the offer is made to the public, even if, in fact, it is addressed by name, to a very large number of people, identified thanks to their census on a file, for example. Thus, this distinction is found to be limited by certain commercial behavior. The offer can still be addressed "to the public" ... with the exception of certain: thus, a professional reseller could not buy a large quantity of goods during the promotional offer made by a supermarket, naturally intended for its customers of consumers. Professionals are therefore excluded from these promotional offers.

In general, the distinction between an offer to the public and an offer to a specific person has little impact because the Court of Cassation states in principle that "the offer made to the public binds the applicant to the first accepting in the same conditions that the offer made to a specific person”, contrary to what is retained by the Vienna Convention, as well as English, German and Swiss law. Some believe that, precisely in the case of a building, the rule is “questionable”.

But we admit exceptions to this principle:

  • on the one hand, when the offeror has reserved the right to approve his co-contractor (which will result in the disqualification of the proposed offer to enter into negotiations);
  • on the other hand, and above all, when the offer made to the public concerns a contract normally concluded in consideration of the person (contract intuitu personæ ). Here again it is, in reality, a simple proposal, the reservation of approval then being implicit.

Maintenance of the offer in time[edit]

The offer may be accompanied by a time limit, sometimes of legal origin. It is this which, for the most part, governs the legal regime of the offer.

Deadline imposed by law[edit]

The law itself may require that the offer be maintained. However, even when the law imposes a delay, nothing prevents the parties to foresee a time longer reflection.

Certain provisions resulting from consumer law, in addition to providing that the offer necessarily emanates from the professional, specify that it must be maintained for a certain period so that the consumer can examine it and think about it in peace. In a consumer credit contract , article L311-8 requires that an offer be maintained for a period of 15 days, increased to 30 days in the area of mortgage contracts by article L312- 10. The deadline is 6 days fordistance learning. In reality, more than an offer, this is, according to some authors, a real promise of contract.

The same is sometimes also the case with relations between professionals. Article 1 para. 3 of the Doubin Law of December 31, 1989, now codified in article L330-3, al. 4 of the French Commercial Code provides that anyone who proposes to make "a trade name, a brand or a sign available to another person by requiring from him an exclusive or quasi-exclusive commitment for the exercise of its activity ”must submit a draft contract, accompanied by an informative document,“ 20 days minimum before signing the contract ”. Finally, article 1369-4  of the French Civil Code provides that the author of an offer for the supply of goods or the provision of services by electronic means "remains committed by it as long as it is accessible by electronic means. of its fact ”: the offer is maintained as long as the offeror leaves it accessible.

Determinable period[edit]

Apart from any legal obligation, the sponsor can himself expressly set a deadline:

  • either directly by specifying a duration (in days, weeks or even months) or a date;
  • or indirectly, if the maintenance time clearly results from the offer: thus, by setting a day for the visit of the building that he is putting up for sale, the solicitor undertakes to maintain the offer until 'on this date

This legal practice allows the applicant to allow sufficient time for reflection, when the law has not already granted special protection, but also to prevent an offer formulated under particularly favorable conditions (tight price, discounts, free credit…) is not extended indefinitely.

Once the period has elapsed, the offer is null and void: the offer disappears, as if it had never existed, and an acceptance after the end of the period cannot form the contract.[37]

It is conceivable that the duration of the delay is itself indefinite although it can be determined: thus, when the offer is made "while stocks last", if there is no fixed deadline for the end of the period. of validity of an offer, we can, a posteriori, determine this period.

Indeterminable period[edit]

If the author of the offer did not give it any time limit, case law has decided since 1869 that the said offer cannot remain valid beyond a reasonable period, ie "the time necessary for the person to whom it has been sent examines and responds to the proposal”. The existence and duration of such an implicit delay are sovereignly assessed by the trial judges, which means that the delay cannot be determined objectively, as the good father of the family would have done, but must necessarily be subjective, depending on the considerations of the case. This duration therefore varies according to the circumstances and depends, in particular, on the will of the offeror who had indicated, for example, that the offer had to be accepted quickly, the nature of the contract, the uses, the possibility of 'a rapid variation in prices, or even, more simply, in the distance between the parties, when the diffusion is not immediate.

Author of the offer[edit]

The author of the offer will be the one who formulates the proposal accepted by the recipient, without reservation or counter-proposal. The author of the offer will not necessarily one that is at the origin of the pre-contract processes. Indeed, when the offer is the subject of a counter-proposal, or of an acceptance accompanied by reservation, the negotiations continue, and the one who will make the offer which will be finally legally effective may be the recipient of the initial offer.

In addition, the original offer may lapse and negotiations resume later.

Likewise, the author of the offer is not necessarily the one who drew up the contract. It is sufficient that the original addressee has made a modification to the proposal, even a minor one, determining his consent, for him to become the author of a new offer, which must be accepted by the writer of the initial draft.

Sometimes, the law absolutely designates the person who must be considered as the author of the offer, in particular to protect one of the parties. Thus for the donor (C. civ., Art. 894) and the principal (C. civ., Art. 1984), but also in labor law or consumer law: the employee or the consumer initiates the first contact, but the law qualifies the party in a dominant position (employer, seller) as an offeror.

Form of supply[edit]

In application of the principle of consensualism, the form of pollicitation is indifferent, provided it is exteriorized. No special shape is required. The exposure of a merchandise on the display with an indication of the price, the parking of a taxi in a reserved space, the meter casing not placed and the driver at the wheel, or even a automatic vending machine in working order, but there is nothing to prevent words or attitudes from being described as "purely material".

In a judgment of June 3, 2003, not published in the Bulletin of the Judgments of the Civil Chambers of the Court of Cassation which lists the official law cases of the French High Jurisdiction, the Commercial Chamber has ruled in a direction which may appear to be contrary. An unsigned memorandum of understanding had been circulated by a bank to a company. The Court of Appeal deduced from this that the bank had not intended to commit itself in the event of acceptance; it “sovereignly deduced from this that the documents in dispute did not constitute an offer, but a simple basis for negotiation”. However, the Court of Cassation holds that the Court of Appeal "did not subordinate the consent of the parties and the formation of the contract to any formal condition", and therefore correctly applied the law: the appeal will therefore be dismissed. However, the reason for this decision was not to call into question the application of the principle of consensualism, but to check the firmness of the offer.

Supply regime[edit]

Withdrawal of the offer[edit]

An offer is a simple proposal to contract, which does not contain any commitment on the part of the offeror. This characteristic of the offer regime is a strangeness of positive law, since the offer, as a legal act, should in principle subject its author to binding force. Now, the soliciting party only offers to contract; he does not undertake to contract, unlike the promisor within a unilateral promise. The principle being that of contractual freedom, the solicitor can therefore withdraw his offer until the recipient of the offer accepts the offer.

However, this principle of free revocability of the offer can lead to risks of legal uncertainty: the offer can be revoked at any time, this can force the recipient of the offer to declare its acceptance of the contract imminently, without taking the time to reflect.

The offender, by this option, would also have the possibility of causing damage without incurring any liability. If an offeror offers a potential buyer to cross France to come and buy a car, for example, when he would have promised him that he would wait for his arrival, but sells the car without waiting for it to a third party, there is an abuse of rights . Case law also knows of examples of potential (and disappointed) buyers who have irreversibly changed their personal legal situation: one terminates his lease and finds himself homeless, the other resigns from his job because he is offered an interesting offer. In this case, the judges may consider that the withdrawal of the pollicitation is abusive; Consequently, the buyer who will have incurred costs to respond to the offer may be reimbursed for the costs (transport, study, etc.) that he may have incurred, or else be compensated for the business that he may have neglected, anticipating the conclusion of the contract.

Offer not yet communicated[edit]

For some authors, case law has reduced the scope of the principle of free revocability of the offer to such an extent that, in reality, it only fully comes into play when the offer has not yet been communicated to the recipient. However, this hypothesis, which does not suffer from any difficulty, remains marginal. The solicitor can in fact always interrupt the transmission (in which case, the recipient of the offer will never have known that he was), or deny his offer by a faster means of communication.

When the offer has reached its recipient, the temperaments multiply.

Temperament of principle[edit]

Doctrine and case-law agree to adjust the principle of free revocability of the offer communicated to its recipient. The offer, in fact, may be accompanied by a period during which its maintenance is necessary since the prospective acceptor must have time to examine the proposal sent to him, to make up his mind and to respond to it.

By extension, when the solicitor has not specified a period during which his offer was still valid, case law grants the recipient of the offer a reasonable period of time, for legal security considerations.

Specified timeframe[edit]

In the event that a deadline has been specified, the withdrawal of the offer is faulty.

If it is the solicitor sets this period precisely, he is obliged to maintain his offer until the expiry of this period. If he retracts his offer, even though he will have promised that he will maintain it, the tort liability of the solicitor may be engaged, on the basis of article 1382 of the Civil Code, up to all the damages that this withdrawal may have caused the recipient of the offer to suffer. On the other hand, the judges refuse to pronounce the conclusion of the contract ex officio, in particular in order to respect the doctrine of the autonomy of the will.

If it is the law which fixes the time limit, the revocation of the offer is also faulty. However, some authors have seen in this hypothesis the possibility that the acceptance, subsequent to the early revocation, but which would be formulated before the end of the legal period for maintaining the offer, could form the contract, even if the applicant, in revoking his offer, signified his refusal to contract. It would not be a matter of a promise of contract, but of a particular offer, to which the law simply attaches the particular obligation to maintain it for a certain period.

Deadline not determined[edit]

When no time limit has been specified, a distinction must be made, conventionally, according to whether the offer was made to the public or to a specific person. However, this distinction is questioned, and must certainly be put into perspective. This time limit is fully appreciated by the judges on the merits, and the Court of Cassation may invite them, by means of an appeal in cassation, by invoking a lack of response to the conclusions, to determine whether "the offer does not implicitly include reasonable acceptance”.

Offer made to the public[edit]

The offer made to the public without indication of a deadline will be freely revocable. This opinion is in line with article 14-2 of the Vienna Convention which considers that in this case there is a simple invitation to the offer and not a genuine offer.

Offer made to specific persons[edit]

According to case law, a "reasonable period", "moral", must always be left to the recipient of the offer. In general, this period is very short, especially in commercial matters, in order to respect the imperatives of speed of transactions, and it is only when it expires that the right of withdrawal can be freely exercised. This reasonable period is left to the sovereign appreciation of the trial judges. As soon as the withdrawal is possible, the applicant is not obliged to notify the recipient of a formal notice: the withdrawal can be made without notifying the recipient, at the expiration of a reasonable period of time.

Legal foundations[edit]

Several foundations have been put forward to explain this obligation to maintain the supply over time, which is apparently contradictory with the theory of the autonomy of the will: what we have done, we must be able to undo it freely. Some authors will therefore seek a basis in the tradition of French law, which considers that only the contract and the responsibility are sources of legal obligations. Others, on the other hand, break with this tradition by creating a third source of legal obligation: oneself.

Theory of the pre-contract[edit]

The theory of the pre-contract was advanced by Demolombe. If a solicitor issues an offer specifying that he will maintain it for a specified period, there are actually two offers: the first, which determines the content of the future contract, the second, which proposes to maintain the initial offer for a period of time. As this ancillary offer only presented advantages for the recipient, it could be assumed that the recipient tacitly accepted it. It is therefore a preliminary contract that has been formed, which obliges the solicitor to maintain its offer for the duration indicated. According to this doctrine, if no time limit is stipulated, it is presumed that the solicitor wished to give time to reflect: there is therefore an implicit offer of time.

This foundation has been criticized for its largely artificial nature: if the silence of the recipient of the offer implies acceptance of it, when it is made for the exclusive benefit of the recipient, the resulting contract must not be a fiction. This basis is only valid if there is really an agreement to maintain the offer for a certain period. The explanation proposed by Demolombe "illustrates wonderfully the exaggerations of the theory of the autonomy of the will".

Public liability[edit]

For other authors, it is necessary to appeal to civil liability: this solution comes moreover from the tradition of Pothier, who derived the obligation of the contributor from a rule of equity, which requires that "no one must not suffer because of another”. For these authors, the withdrawal of the offer constitutes a fault, causing damage to the recipient of the offer. The solicitor remedies this fault by means of damages, or by compensation in kind by deciding that the contract is concluded, despite the withdrawal of the offer.

However, there is only fault if there is a pre-existing obligation, which is precisely what one seeks to demonstrate; however, these authors appeal to the theory of abuse of rights: the offer creates in the mind of the recipient a legitimate expectation, the hope of a contract, which its premature withdrawal disappoints. However, the requirement of legal certainty inherent in business dealings, requires no mistake legitimate expectations of the corresponding.

Theory of unilateral engagement[edit]

Some authors oppose the idea of ​​a free revocability of the offer, and defend in particular the theory of unilateral commitment, which prohibits the author of an offer from being able to withdraw it, the offer being separated of its author and enjoying autonomy in relation to it: the offer then becomes, in itself, a source of obligations. French law however accepts only the law, the contract, the quasi-contract , the misdemeanor and the quasi-delict as sources of obligations, and not the only offer, with a view to carrying out a contract. This theory has never been enshrined in French positive law.

On the other hand, it is retained by German civil law: the German Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch), provides, in §145:

“Whoever offers to enter into a contract with others is bound by the offer, unless he has excluded this obligatory link."

— BGB, § 145 Bindung an den Antrag

It follows that the author of the offer must maintain it for a period varying according to the circumstances, and that the death or incapacity of the offeror occurring after the issuance of the offer does not prevent the acceptance of the offer: it survives its author, it has an independent legal existence. However, a certain place is left to the theory of the autonomy of the will, since the offeror can reserve a right of withdrawal, on the condition that it is explicit. In French law, certain authors have proposed a dualist analysis: the solicitor would only be bound by a unilateral declaration of will when he has undertaken to maintain an offer for a determined period; otherwise, the theory of civil liability operates.

Synthesis[edit]

The legal regime of the withdrawal of the pollicitation can therefore be summarized as follows.

Was the offer accepted? Has the offer been communicated to the recipient? Was an explicit deadline set? Can the sponsor withdraw the offer?
Offer accepted indifferent indifferent Withdrawal not possible: contract formed.
Offer not accepted. Offer arrived at recipient. Time limit set. Offer irrevocable during the period.
Offer not accepted. Offer arrived at recipient. Deadline not fixed. Offer irrevocable within a reasonable period of time.
Offer not accepted. Offer not yet arrived at recipient. indifferent Possible withdrawal: contractual freedom.
Other legal instruments[edit]

The UNIDROIT principles also describe a regime for the withdrawal of offer, shared by the principles of European contract law, by creating a statute for an explicitly irrevocable offer, approaching the solution in French law, since the offer accompanied by a deadline by the solicitor is irrevocable, during this period.

Termination of the offer[edit]

The offer is qualified as null and void when an element necessary for it to be so qualified disappears after it has been made. As soon as this element disappears, the offer ceases to have any effect, regardless of the will of the contributor.

Acceptance[edit]

In the first place, we can say that the offer is null and void from the moment it is accepted. More particularly, when the offer is addressed to the public, but can only give rise to a single contract, the first acceptance renders the offer null and void with regard to other possible acceptors: it is in fact impossible to make it survive the offer.

Elapsed time[edit]

Pollicitation will also be considered to lapse once a certain period has elapsed; however, the problem arises in determining this time limit.

If the offeror had himself specified the period during which his offer survived, he would be committing a fault in withdrawing it, but after this period, any acceptance would be ineffective, because the offer would then have itself disappeared. In this sense, the specified time limit is binding on the author of the offer and the recipient; its expiry renders the offer null and void. It was judged that this lapse could affect the offer the next day.

When the offeror has not specified a deadline, we agree that the offer may implicitly contain a promise of a reasonable, “moral” period, the duration of which is fully appreciated by the trial judges. This solution joins that adopted in article 18-2 of the Vienna Convention, according to which the acceptance of an offer does not take effect if the indication of acquiescence "does not reach the author of the offer within the time limit that it has stipulated or, in the absence of such a stipulation, within a reasonable time, taking into account the circumstances of the transaction and the speed of the means of communication used by the author of the offer”.

However, it would be necessary to differentiate the implicit time limit for maintaining the offer from that of the lapse itself. The reason for these two deadlines is, in fact, different:

  • in the first case, it is a question of knowing whether the offeror committed a fault by withdrawing his offer too early;
  • in the second, we wonder if the offer was still valid and therefore, if the acceptance could have formed the contract.

On the other hand, when a time limit has been expressly specified by the offeror, this distinction does not apply.

Loss of capacity, death[edit]

Under French law, the offer finally becomes null and void in the event of the death or incapacity of the offeror.[12]

If the offer is therefore null and void, since the consent of the parties to a sale is not subject to any formal condition, the trial judges must determine whether the purchaser has given his consent, before the seller's death.

However, in a judgment dated June 25, 2014, the Court of Cassation considered that "the offer which is not accompanied by a deadline lapses by the death of the one from whom it emanates before it has been accepted". The Court distinguished between fixed-term offers and open-ended offers. When the offer is for an indefinite period, the offeror's will to contract ceases with his death: the offer is therefore null and void. Conversely, when the offer is accompanied by a deadline, it remains valid at least until the end of this period, the death of the offeror does not change the validity of the offer.

Notes and References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The notion of legal regime refers to a set of rules on a particular notion.
  2. ^ The term disqualify is used in law, and in this article, to designate a change in the legal qualification of a fact, in favor of a more flexible legal concept.
  3. ^ In this hypothesis, this will mean that there will be only one invitation to negotiate. Whoever makes this invitation will not have been sufficiently firm and precise as to the content of the contract he is proposing. The recipient of this offer can then in reality make a new offer, which we will call a counter-offer, and the person who invited in negotiations can accept this counter-offer, or else make a new counter-offer.
  4. ^ In this hypothesis, the offer will not have been firm, in order to put the recipients of this call in competition. Even very precise in specifications, calls for tenders do not require a specific price.
  5. ^ The notion of pollicitation does not exist, in the strict sense, in other European doctrines, in particular German, or in Common law countries (for which the rule of the previous one provides for a legal delimitation of the notion of contractual offer, without there being any recourse also extended to legal authors).
  6. ^ The preliminary contracts are sometimes called "pre-contracts", since these preliminary contracts are made in the only goal of concluding a further contract
  7. ^ This is a common category of contract, where, in reality, no negotiation is possible: either one adheres to the content of the contract, or one refuses all of it.
  8. ^ In which the parties will carry out, consensually, a "point by point" contract, without a single solicitation.

Quotes[edit]

  1. ^

    “A proposal to conclude a contract addressed to one or more determined persons constitutes an offer if it is sufficiently precise and if it indicates the will of its author to be bound in the event of acceptance."

    — United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (1980)[7]
  2. ^

    “A proposal to conclude a contract constitutes an offer if it is sufficiently precise and if it indicates the will of its author to be bound in the event of acceptance."

    — UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts (2004), Article 2.1.12 (Definition of the offer)[8]
  3. ^

    “1. A proposal constitutes an offer when: (a) it indicates the desire to conclude a contract if accepted (b) and contains sufficiently precise conditions for a contract to be formed.
    2. The offer may be made to one or more specified persons or to the public.
    3. The offer, made by a professional supplier, in an advertisement or a catalog or as a result of the exhibition of goods, to procure goods or services at a fixed price, is deemed to constitute an offer to sell or provide the services at that price until exhaustion of the stock of goods or of the possibilities of rendering the service."

    — Principles of European contract law, article 2: 201: offer[9]
  4. ^

    “An offer is an expression of will to contract for certain main clauses, made with the intention that it is legally binding as soon as it is accepted by the person to whom this offer is addressed, the “offeree” [recipient of the offer]"

    — GH Treitel, The Law of Contract, 10th Edition, p.8[10]
  5. ^

    “An offer to contract, is the proposal which includes all the essential elements of the envisaged contract and which indicates the will of its author to be bound in the event of acceptance."

    — Civil Code of Quebec, art. 1388[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ulpien: pacte et pollicitation (Trad. française)". droitromain.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr. Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  2. ^ Braudo, Serge; Baumann, Alexis. "Pollicitation - Définition". Dictionnaire Juridique (in French). Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  3. ^ a b Bamdé, Aurélien; Bourdoiseau, Julien (2017-01-27). "Le régime juridique de l'offre: notion, caractères, révocation, caducité et réforme des obligations". aurelienbamde.com (in French). Retrieved 2021-08-09.
  4. ^ a b Terré, Simler and Lequette, p. 118
  5. ^ Monique, Cabrol Pierre, Ribeyrol (2018-10-02). Leçons de Droit des obligations - 2e édition (in French). Editions Ellipses. p. 57. ISBN 978-2-340-05284-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Fabre-Magnan, Muriel (2004). Les obligations (in French). Presses universitaires de France. ISBN 978-2-13-050392-7.
  7. ^ Convention des nations unies sur les contrats de vente internationale de marchandises [United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods] (PDF) (in French). 1980. p. 9.
  8. ^ "Article 2.1.2 (Definition of offer)". www.unidroit.org. Retrieved 2021-08-09.
  9. ^ Berger, Klaus Peter. "Principles of European Contract Law - PECL". www.trans-lex.org. Retrieved 2021-08-09.
  10. ^ Treitel, G. H.. The Law of Contract. United Kingdom: Sweet & Maxwell, 1999.
  11. ^ "Chapter CCQ-1991 CIVIL CODE OF QUÉBEC". legisquebec.gouv.qc.ca. 15 April 2021.
  12. ^ a b "L'offre ou « pollicitation » en droit des contrats - Fiches / Cours" (in French). 12 May 2019. Retrieved 2021-08-09.
  13. ^ a b D, Edouard (2009-08-12). "L'autonomie de l'offre par rapport à la personne de l'offrant - publié le 08/12/2009". Publications Doc du Juriste (in French).
  14. ^ Le droit des obligations dans les jurisprudences française et belge (in French). Primento. 2013-11-18. p. 8. ISBN 978-2-8027-4296-8.
  15. ^ "Sous-section « L'offre et l'acceptation » de la réforme du droit des contrats (présentation)". Ressources Open Access de l'Institut d'études judiciaires Jean Domat (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-24.
  16. ^ a b Cabrol, Pierre; Ribeyrol, Monique (2018). "Leçon 7. L'offre et l'acceptation". Leçons de droit des obligations (in French). Vol. 2e éd. Ellipses. pp. 57–63. ISBN 9782340028548.
  17. ^ Fava, Pasquale (2012). Il contratto (in Italian). Giuffrè Editore. p. 85. ISBN 978-88-14-16538-2.
  18. ^ Terré, François; Simler, Philippe; Lequette, Yves (2005). Droit civil: les obligations (in French). Dalloz. ISBN 978-2-247-06322-2.
  19. ^ "United Nations Convention On Contracts For The International Sale Of Goods, 1980 (CISG)". www.jus.uio.no. 1980. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  20. ^ Terré, Simler and Lequette, p. 119
  21. ^ Pothier, Robert Joseph (1761). Traité des obligations (in French). Debure l'ainé.
  22. ^ a b Fabre-Magnan, p.229
  23. ^ a b Répertoire de droit civil (in French). Dalloz Livres. 1998. ISBN 978-2-247-03244-0.
  24. ^ a b Fréchette, Pascal (2010). "La qualification des contrats : aspects pratiques". Les Cahiers de droit (in French). 51 (2): 375–424. doi:10.7202/045635ar. ISSN 0007-974X. S2CID 159509399.
  25. ^ "L'information sur les prix". www.economie.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  26. ^ "Article 1583 - Code civil - Légifrance". www.legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  27. ^ "Titre VI : De la vente (Articles 1582 à 1701-1) - Légifrance". www.legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  28. ^ "Le contrat type de location en 10 questions". Institut national de la consommation (in French). 2016-12-02. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  29. ^ Terre, Simler and Lequette, p.119
  30. ^ D, Valentin (2012-02-06). "L'offre en droit". Publications Pimido (in French).
  31. ^ Cour de Cassation, Chambre civile 1, du 29 novembre 1994, 91-21.009, Publié au bulletin, retrieved 2022-01-22
  32. ^ Briguet-Lamarre, Raphaël (2020-12-05). "La détermination du prix : articles 1164, 1165 du code civil". Aideauxtd.com (in French). Retrieved 2022-07-08.
  33. ^ a b "Article 1369-4, Section 2 : De la conclusion d'un contrat sous forme électronique". www.legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 2022-07-08.
  34. ^ Fabre-Magnan, Muriel (2018). "Chapitre II. La volonté". Le droit des contrats (in French) (Muriel Fabre-Magnan ed.). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. pp. 17–47. ISBN 978-2-13-080993-7. OCLC 1108639028.
  35. ^ "4 Questions autour de l'offre de vente ou d'achat". Immo Formation (in French). 2020-05-22. Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  36. ^ Fabre-Magnan, p.226
  37. ^ "Le droit des contrats - Fiches / Cours". cours-de-droit.net (in French). 12 March 2019. Retrieved 2021-09-29.

Bibliography[edit]