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Contracts | Non Profit Organizations | Business Legislation
Contracts
Contracts are promises that
the law will enforce. The law provides remedies
if a promise is breached or recognizes the performance
of a promise as a duty. Contracts arise when a
duty does or may come into existence, because
of a promise made by one of the parties. To be
legally binding as a contract, a promise must
be exchanged for adequate consideration.
Adequate consideration is a benefit or detriment
which a party receives which reasonably and fairly
induces them to make the promise/contract . For
example, promises that are purely gifts are not
considered enforceable because the personal satisfaction
the grantor of the promise may receive from the
act of giving is normally not considered adequate
consideration. Certain promises that are not considered
contracts may, in limited circumstances, be enforced
if one party has relied to his detriment on the
assurances of the other party.
Contracts are mainly governed by state statutory
and common law and private law. Private law principally
includes the terms of the agreement between the
parties who are exchanging promises. This private
law may override many of the rules otherwise established
by state law.
Statutory law may require some contracts be put
in writing and executed with particular formalities.
Otherwise, the parties may enter into a binding
agreement without signing a formal written document.
See § 110 of The Restatement. Most of the
principles of the common law of contracts are
outlined in the Restatement Second of The Law
of Contracts published by the American Law Institute.
See Restatement (Second) of Contracts. The Uniform
Commercial Code, whose original Articles have
been adopted in nearly every state, represents
a body of statutory law that governs important
categories of contracts. The main Articles that
deal with the law of contracts are Article 1 (General
Provisions) and Article 2 (Sales).
Sections of Article 9 (Secured Transactions)
governs contracts assigning the rights to payment
in security interest agreements. Contracts related
to particular activities or business sectors may
be highly regulated by state and/or federal law.See
Law Relating To Other Topics Dealing with Particular
Activities or Business Sectors.
In 1988, the United States joined the United
Nations Convention on Contracts for the International
Sale of Goods which now governs contracts within
its scope.
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Non-Profit Organizations
A non profit organization is
an organization incorporated under state laws
and approved by both the state's Secretary of
State and its taxing authority as operating for
educational, charitable, social, religious, civic
or humanitarian purposes. The incorporators, directors
and officers of the organization may not receive
a distribution of (any money from) profits, but
officers and management may be paid reasonable
salaries for services to the corporation. Upon
dissolution of a nonprofit corporation its assets
must be distributed to an organization existing
for similar purposes under the "cy pres doctrine."
In order for contributions to the corporation
to be deductible as charitable gifts on federal
income taxes, the corporation must submit a detailed
application (with a substantial fee) for an Internal
Revenue Service ruling that it is established
for one of the specific nonprofit purposes spelled
out in the Internal Revenue Code.
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Business Legislation
Legislation refers to the preparation
and enactment of laws by a legislative body through
its lawmaking process. The legislative process
includes evaluating, amending, and voting on proposed
laws and is concerned with the words used in the
bill to communicate the values, judgments, and
purposes of the proposal. An idea becomes an item
of legislative business when it is written as
a bill. A bill is a draft, or tentative version,
of what might become part of the written law.
A bill that is enacted is called an act or statute.
Ideas for legislation can come from legislators
who have experience in a particular field, or
legislators can copy legislation because an idea
that works well in one jurisdiction can be useful
to its neighbors. Legislators also receive proposals
from the National Conference of Commissioners
on Uniform State Laws; a conference of 250 lawyers
appointed by governors to represent the states.
The Council of State Governments, the American
Law Institute, the American Bar Association, and
numerous other organizations all produce model
acts for legislatures. Protection and promotion
of social and economic interests of particular
groups also motivate legislation. Interests groups
usually become involved in the legislative process
through lobbyists.
The general procedure of enactment of legislation
is governed by the relevant constitution. When
a bill is first introduced by a sponsor it is
referred to a committee. If the bill must go through
more than one committee, the first committee must
refer it to the second. To accommodate interested
and affected groups and to eliminate technical
defects a bill can be amended. If the committee
recommends that the bill be passed, the bill is
placed on the agenda for action by the full legislative
body, or floor action. After a lengthy and complex
procedure of deliberation and debates, legislators
vote on the final passage of the bill. In bicameral
legislatures (legislatures that are divided into
to two bodies as Senate and House in the United
States government) the bill must be passed through
both houses in exactly the same form to become
the law. When the two houses cannot agree on a
final form for the bill, a complex procedure of
compromise is attempted. Once the bill is approved
by both houses and is put into final form, it
must be signed by the executive. An executive
can refuse to sign a bill and can return it to
the legislature with a veto message explaining
why. If the executive signs the bill, it is filed
and becomes law.