Asked by Devendra Suthar on Jun 30, 2024

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Jason's mother would like him to go to college, so in June he enrolls at the local university. He also quits his job and tells his mother his plans to take classes. His mother says, "I'm so happy that you are going to college that I want to pay for your books." Jason then sends her a bill for $485. Jason's mother's promise is:

A) enforceable, because Jason returned to college.
B) enforceable, because Jason is giving up the right to do something else.
C) unenforceable, because it is a unilateral contract.
D) unenforceable, because Jason had already enrolled in school when she made the statement that she wanted to pay for his books, and there is no consideration.

Consideration

The value (such as money, a service, or a promise) that is exchanged between parties in a contract.

  • Understand the deployment and exclusions related to the doctrine of consideration, with emphasis on past consideration and moral commitment.
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Oluwafemi AyodeleJul 05, 2024
Final Answer :
D
Explanation :
Jason's mother's promise is unenforceable because there was no consideration for her promise; Jason had already enrolled in college and quit his job before she offered to pay for his books, so he did not incur any new obligation or give up any legal right in reliance on her promise.