Editing Contracts/Mailbox rule

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==Acceptance Made by Post==
==Acceptance Made by Post==


Where a person makes an offer, and requires or authorizes the offeree either expressly or impliedly to send his answer by post and the answer is duly posted, the contract is '''complete from the time the letter is mailed''', and it is immaterial that afterwards the letter be delayed or altogether fail in reaching its destination, by default of the post office or by accident in transmission.<ref>The sending or accepting an offer by telegraph is governed by the same rules. [[Tuttle v. Jackson]], 36 N. Y. 309; [[Minn. Oil Co. v. Collier Lead Co.]], 4 Dill, 431; [[Weld Co. v. Victory Co.]], 205 Fed. 770. And, of course, an offer may be accepted through the telephone. [[Dudley Tyng Co. v. Converse]], 180 Mich. 195, 146 N.W. 629; [[Burton v. U.S.]], 202 U.S. 344, 26 Sc. T. 688.</ref> As soon as the letter is delivered to the post office the contract is as complete as if the acceptor had put it into the hands of a messenger sent by the offerer himself as his agent to deliver the offer and receive the accept­ance.<ref>9 Cyc. 295, 13 C. J. 300; [[Tayloe v. Ins. Co.]], 9 How. 390; [[Mactier v. Frith]], 6 Wend. 103, 21 Am. Dec. 262; [[Moore v. Pierson]], 6 Iowa 279, 71 Am. Dec. 409; [[Trevor v. Wood]], 36 N.Y. 307, 93 Am. Dec. 511; [[Kempner v. Cohn]], 47 Ark. 519, 58 Am. Rep. 775; [[Haas v. Myers]], 111 Ill. 426, 53 Am. Rep. 674; [[Trounstine v. Sellers]], 35 Kan. 447, 11 Pac. 441; [[Calhoun v. Atchison]], 4 Bush 261, 96 Am. Dec. 299; [[Postal Tel. Co. v. Louisville Cotton Co.]], 140 Ky. 506, 131 S. W. 277; [[Wester v. Casein Co.]], 206 N.Y. 506, 100 N.E. 488; [[Perry v. Mt. Hope Iron Co.]], 15 R.I. 380, 5 Atl. Rep. 632, 2 Am. St. Rep. 902. Contra In [[Massachusetts, McCullough v. Eagle Ins. Co.]], 1 Pick. 278. But see [[Brauer v. Shaw]], 168 Mass. 198. This rule will not be extended to make communication by mall to the offeree's agent a sufficient acceptance, though accompanied by a direction to give notice. [[New v. Ins. Co.]], 171 Ind. 33, 85 N. E. 703.</ref> The contract is properly held to be complete when the acceptor has mailed the letter of acceptance, because this is an act contemplated and impliedly authorized by the offerer as the mode of manifesting the intention of the acceptor to close with the offer. The acceptor by this act does all that is requisite in the usual course of business--he thereby puts the letter of acceptance beyond his control, and he is not answerable for the casualties of the mail service.<ref>The English courts did not at once arrive at the American doctrine. In [[Adams v Lindsell]], 1 B. & Ald. 681, It was ruled that the post office was the agent of the offerer, and that he was liable for its defaults. "In [[Dunlap v. Higgins]], 1 H. L. Cas. 381," says Mr. Anson (Contr. 23.),
Where a person makes an offer, and requires or authorizes the offeree either expressly or impliedly to send his answer by post and the answer is duly posted, the contract is '''complete from the time the letter is mailed''', and it is immaterial that afterwards the letter be delayed or altogether fail in reaching its destination, by default of the post office or by accident in transmission.<ref>The sending or accepting an offer by telegraph is governed by the same rules. [[Tuttle v. Jackson]], 36 N. Y. 309; [[Minn. Oil Co. v. Collier Lead Co.]], 4 Dill, 431; [[Weld Co. v. Victory Co.]], 205 Fed. 770. And, of course, an offer may be accepted through the telephone. [[Dudley Tyng Co. v. Converse]], 180 Mich. 195, 146 N.W. 629; [[Burton v. U.S.]], 202 U.S. 344, 26 Sc. T. 688.</ref> As soon as the letter is delivered to the post office the contract is as complete as if the acceptor had put it into the hands of a messenger sent by the offerer himself as his agent to deliver the offer and receive the accept­ance.<ref>9 Cyc. 295, 13 C. J. 300; [[Tayloe v. Ins. Co.]], 9 How. 390; [[Mactier v. Frith]], 6 Wend. 103, 21 Am. Dec. 262; [[Moore v. Pierson]], 6 Iowa 279, 71 Am. Dec. 409; [[Trevor v. Wood]], 36 N.Y. 307, 93 Am. Dec. 511; [[Kempner v. Cohn]], 47 Ark. 519, 58 Am. Rep. 775; [[Haas v. Myers]], 111 Ill. 426, 53 Am. Rep. 674; [[Trounstine v. Sellers]], 35 Kan. 447, 11 Pac. 441; [[Calhoun v. Atchison]], 4 Bush 261, 96 Am. Dec. 299; [[Postal Tel. Co. v. Louisville Cotton Co.]], 140 Ky. 506, 131 S. W. 277; [[Wester v. Casein Co.]], 206 N.Y. 506, 100 N.E. 488; [[Perry v. Mt. Hope Iron Co.]], 15 R.I. 380, 5 Atl. Rep. 632, 2 Am. St. Rep. 902. Contra In [[Massachusetts, McCullough v. Eagle Ins. Co.]], 1 Pick. 278. But see [[Brauer v. Shaw]], 168 Mass. 198. This rule will not be extended to make communication by mall to the offeree's agent a sufficient acceptance, though accompanied by a direction to give notice. [[New v. Ins. Co.]], 171 Ind. 33, 85 N. E. 703.</ref> The contract is properly held to be complete when the acceptor has mailed the letter of acceptance, because this is an act contemplated and impliedly authorized by the offerer as the mode of manifesting the intention of the acceptor to close with the offer. The acceptor by this act does all that is requisite in the usual course of business--he thereby puts the letter of acceptance beyond his control, and he is not answerable for the casualties of the mail service.<ref>The English courts did not at once arrive at the American doctrine. In [[Adams v Lindsell]], 1 B. & Ald. 681, It was ruled that the post office was the agent of the offerer, and that he was liable for its defaults. "In [[Dunlap v. Higgins]], 1 H. L. Cas. 381," says Mr. Anson (Contr. 23.)


{{Quote|Lord Cottenham held, though it was not neces­sary to the decision or the case, that the posting of a letter of acceptance concluded the contract whatever might afterwards befall the letter. But the Court of Exchequer, in a later case, [[British Am. Tel. Co. v. Colson]], L.R. 6 Ex. 108, tried hard to escape the consequences of the rule, and Kelly, C. B., laid it down that the contract was not binding till the letter of acceptance was received, but that when it was received its operation related back to the moment of its posting. This decision was virtually overruled in Harris' case, L. R. 7 Ch. 587; as to the moment when the contract was complete, but Mellish, L. J., said that, though "complete at the time when the letter accepting the offer is posted, yet it may be subject to a condition subsequent that if the letter does not arrive in due course of post, then the parties may act on the assumption that the offer has not been accepted." But it is now settled, in [[Household Fire Insurance Company v. Grant]], 4 Ex. Div. 216, that the parties are bound, from the moment the letter is put in course of transmission, by a contract, the existence of which is unaffected by the subsequent fate of the letter. The contract does not re­main, up to the moment the acceptance is received in the state of suspended animation contemplated by Kelly, C. B.; nor is it subject to the condition subsequent suggested by Mellish, L. J.}}
{{Quote|Lord Cottenham held, though it was not neces­sary to the decision or the case, that the posting of a letter of acceptance concluded the contract whatever might afterwards befall the letter. But the Court of Exchequer, in a later case, [[British Am. Tel. Co. v. Colson]], L.R. 6 Ex. 108, tried hard to escape the consequences of the rule, and Kelly, C. B., laid it down that the contract was not binding till the letter of acceptance was received, but that when it was received its operation related back to the moment of its posting. This decision was virtually overruled in Harris' case, L. R. 7 Ch. 587; as to the moment when the contract was complete, but Mellish, L. J., said that, though "complete at the time when the letter accepting the offer is posted, yet it may be subject to a condition subsequent that if the letter does not arrive in due course of post, then the parties may act on the assumption that the offer has not been accepted." But it is now settled, in [[Household Fire Insurance Company v. Grant]], 4 Ex. Div. 216, that the parties are bound, from the moment the letter is put in course of transmission, by a contract, the existence of which is unaffected by the subsequent fate of the letter. The contract does not re­main, up to the moment the acceptance is received in the state of suspended animation contemplated by Kelly, C. B.; nor is it subject to the condition subsequent suggested by Mellish, L. J.}}
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{{quote|Where parties are at distance from one another, and an offer is sent by mail, it is universally held in this country [United States] that the reply accepting the offer may be sent through the same medium, and, if it is so sent, the contract will be complete when the acceptance is mailed,&nbsp;... and beyond the acceptor's control; the theory being that, when one makes an offer through the mail, he authorizes the acceptance to be made through the same medium his agent to receive his acceptance; that the acceptance, when mailed, is then constructively communicated to the offeror.|Excerpt of an opinion by Judge Kimmelman (718 A.2d 1223)}}
{{quote|Where parties are at distance from one another, and an offer is sent by mail, it is universally held in this country [United States] that the reply accepting the offer may be sent through the same medium, and, if it is so sent, the contract will be complete when the acceptance is mailed,&nbsp;... and beyond the acceptor's control; the theory being that, when one makes an offer through the mail, he authorizes the acceptance to be made through the same medium his agent to receive his acceptance; that the acceptance, when mailed, is then constructively communicated to the offeror.|Excerpt of an opinion by Judge Kimmelman (718 A.2d 1223)}}


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