Testing Your Knowledge of Contracts
Take this 20 question quiz to test your knowledge of contracts. Answer key is at the bottom.
- Which of the following do you need in order to have an enforceable contract?
- Consideration
- Offer
- Acceptance
- All of the above
- True or false, if you sue someone and you win, you’re always entitled to recover your legal fees.
- True
- False
- True or false, courts will almost always enforce an arbitration clause in a contract?
- True
- False
- The purpose of a contract is to:
- Memorialize your intentions
- Take advantage of your counterparty
- Memorialize your expectations
- Allocate risk between the parties
- Both A and C
- A, C, and D
- Courts will do which of the following when interpreting a contract?
- Courts will enforce a contract “as is”, even if it’s a bad deal for one of the parties
- Courts will re-write the parts of the contract that are unfair or inequitable
- All of the above
- None of the above
- An agreement to agree on something later is:
- Always enforceable
- Almost always unenforceable
- Sometimes enforceable
- Never enforceable
- What is the best skill in negotiating any contract?
- Listening
- Speaking first
- Cornering your opponent
- Splitting the difference
- True or false, if you don’t have a signed agreement, then the agreement is not enforceable.
- True
- False
- True or false, Courts will consider your subjective undocumented intent for entering into an agreement
- True
- False
- Which of the following is correct? Ambiguities in a contract can arise out of any of the following:
- failing to define a key term
- failure to set forth an essential procedure or “condition precedent”
- conflicts between key contract documents.
- All of the above
- True or false, Courts will often consider prior oral agreements when interpreting a contract, even if those prior agreements contradict or add to the written terms of a contract?
- True
- False
- What is considered a “fair deal”?
- One that is reasonable for both parties given the specific facts and circumstances
- One that does not undermine your ability to reasonably perform your work
- One that doesn’t cause you to lose money
- All of the above
- None of the above
- True or false, you can be personally liable on a breach of contract claim.
- True
- False
- True or false, you can limit your liability through a written contract.
- True
- False
- True or false, a claim for fraud can arise out of the same exact facts that form the basis for a breach of contract claim.
- True
- False
- True or false, a contract may consist of more than one document.
- True
- False
- True or false, you can terminate a contract for a non-material breach
- True
- False
- Which of the following would be the most likely measure of damages in a breach of contract lawsuit?
- The money owed to you under the contract for services you performed
- Pain and suffering
- The opportunities you lost in the process of performing work under the contract
- All of the above
- Which of the following do you need in order to prove a breach of contract claim?
- You have to show that you’re a U.S. citizen
- You have to have an agreement in writing
- You have to show that you’ve been damaged
- True or false, a modification to a contract can be enforceable without any additional legal consideration.
- True
- False
ANSWER KEY:
- D
- B
- A
- F
- A
- B
- A
- B
- B
- D
- B
- D
- A
- A
- B
- A
- B
- A
- C
- B