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promissory estoppel

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terron | 03:53 Wed 05th May 2004 | How it Works
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promissory estoppel
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And the question is?
Do you mean the doctrine allowing recovery on a promise made without consideration where the reliance on the promise was reasonable, and the promisee relied to his/her detriment?
Huh?
Promissory estoppel operates where one party to a contract undertakes (whether by words or by conduct) that he will not enforce his rights under a contract in whole or in part and where the other party has acted to his detriment on that promise; in such a case the first party will not be allowed to sue on the original contract.
DAM !!!! I was just about to type that myself. ;-)
You're right, Jenny, I could have put this more clearly. In a court case an essence is that everyone must tell the truth. However, there is an exception in the doctrine that a person cannot make a gain through falsity or negligence - promissory estoppel or just estoppel - under which a person is not allowed to say in court what is true. An instance that comes to mind is that A asserts to B that C is his manager with power to act for him. B makes contracts with C on that basis. A later trys to renege on these contracts. A is not allowed, having induced B to make the contracts, to go to court to prove the truth that C was in fact not his manager, only a clerk. It must proceed in court as if C was A's manager, although this is untrue. Hope this is better! There are estoppels to do with land, but that is another subject! Best wishes.
I think it was the land one terron was referring too.
Who's one terron?
A spanish bull fighter.

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