• Does that mean minors may not make a contract

    No, minors may make contracts. But courts may choose not to enforce some of them. The law
    presumes that minors need to be protected from their lack of maturity, and won't allow, for example,a Porsche salesman to exploit their naivete by enforcing a signed sales contract whose real
    implications a young person is unlikely to have comprehended. Sometimes this results in minors
    receiving benefits (such as goods or services) and not having to pay for them, though they would
    have to return any goods still in their possession. This would apply even to minors who are
    emancipated - living entirely on their own - who get involved in contractual relationships, as well as
    to a minor who lives at home but is unsupervised long enough to get into a contractual fix.
    Parents who give their children access to home computers hooked up to the Internet should
    consider the situation that may arise if a child uses their credit card information online. This includes
    information that may be stored in the computer or at a website that recognizes your home computer
    and, of course, doesn't know that a minor is the actual "shopper." From the point of view of the
    website owner, the parent is the customer, and you may have a hard time avoiding liability for a
    contract (such as for the purchase of merchandise) that your children have entered into using your
    Internet identity.
    Also, a court may require a minor or the minor's parents to pay the fair market value (not
    necessarily the contract price) for what courts call necessaries (what you would likely call
    "necessities"). The definition of a "necessary" depends entirely on the person and the situation. It
    probably will always include food and probably will never include CD's, Nintendo cartridges or
    Porsches. Minors who reach full age and do not disavow their contracts may then have to comply
    with all their terms. In some states, courts may require a minor to pay the fair value of goods or
    services purchased under a contract that minor has disavowed.

1 comments:

  1. Gafv8 says:

    I never thought about the computer issue that is a very good point.

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