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Felthouse v Bindley [1862] EWHC CP J35, is the leading English contract law case on the rule that one cannot impose an obligation on another to reject one's offer. This is sometimes misleadingly expressed as a rule that "silence cannot amount to acceptance".
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Pages in category "1862 in case law" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. ... Felthouse v Bindley; H. Holroyd v Marshall; M. Milroy v Lord; R ...
Pages in category "1862 in British law" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... Felthouse v Bindley; H. Habeas Corpus Act 1862; Holroyd v ...
As acceptance must be communicated, the offeror cannot include an Acceptance by Silence clause. This was affirmed in Felthouse v Bindley, [36] here an uncle made an offer to buy his nephew's horse, saying that if he did not hear anything else he would "consider the horse mine". This did not stand up in court, and it was decided there could not ...
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The Battle of The Pineberry Battery (or Engagements at Pineberry, Willtown, and White Point) was a series of minor engagements, fought April 29, 1862, in Charleston County, South Carolina, during the American Civil War. The engagements proceeded from an attack by the Union Navy on a battery on John Berkeley Grimball's plantation on Edisto ...
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