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Suppose two parties have a relationship that might be a contract under U.S. law. Suppose one party is an individual and the other is not, so that if it's a contract it would be a contract of adhesion, thus with any ambiguities to be interpreted in favor of the individual. Suppose in all respects the relationship is a contract except for one possible issue, which is that the party who is not an individual says it's not a contract.

Is it a contract?

(I ask because I increasingly see in advertising or promotion that a company says that you can have their service without a contract and I'm dubious.)

Andrew T.
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Nick
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2 Answers2

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You can have agreements that are not contracts

As such, there are not legally enforceable as contracts but may be enforceable under non-contract law. Examples of such non-contractual agreements include social agreements, statutory duties, memorandums of understanding, agreements to distribute cocaine etc.

However, that’s not what you have here

“No contract” agreements for things like internet or phone services are contracts - the “no contract” terminology is advertising fluff to indicate that the contracts are one-off or short term and don’t lock the customer into a long-term contract.

The term “contract” is being used in a generally understood way as meaning a long-term binding commitment not in a strict legal way where virtually every commercial transaction is a contract

Dale M
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Short Answer: No, it cannot disclaim a contract of adhesion.

Long Answer:

(I ask because I increasingly see in advertising or promotion that a company says that you can have their service without a contract and I'm dubious.)

Most legal words have more than one meaning depending upon the context. The term "contract" is no exception.

In this context, as used in an advertisement or promotion, what "service with a contract" means is service without an "executory contract" (which means a contract that hasn't yet been fully performed when agreed to), for a fixed term, while "service without a contract" means a contract that can be terminated at will or when the amount currently paid for the service is exhausted.

But, in the more general sense that the term contract is usually used in the law, you still have a contract, even though it can be terminated at any time, and either party could sue the other for a breach of contract in court (or in an arbitration forum if the agreement contains an arbitration clause as it often does).

Incidentally, a "contract of adhesion" is a take it or leave it contract, used in many individuals transactions, drafted by the party with more economic power that the party with less economic power must accept to get the service and cannot negotiate the terms of. Status as a contract of adhesion doesn't not dependent upon one's status as an entity or an individual. The contract you describe is almost surely a contract of adhesion, but not for the reasons that you provide.

An entity could be bound by a contract of adhesion and contracts of adhesion are usually enforceable if their terms of reasonably related to the subject matter. A contract of adhesion is not automatically invalid and cannot be disavowed unless it is "unconscionable" (i.e. absurdly unfair and exploitive) and even then such invalidity might be applied to a particular term of the contract of adhesion, rather than to the agreement as a whole.

All contracts drafted by the other party are construed against the drafter in cases of ambiguity. This is not limited to contracts of adhesion, although all contracts of adhesion, by definition, are subject to this rule.

This said, if it is a "no contract" agreement, the business could terminate the agreement either at any time, or when the money already paid is exhausted, which functionally isn't that different from disclaiming a contract. The difference would be that the contract terms that were in force while service was provided (e.g. a privacy policy or a waiver of liability) would continue to be binding on both parties with respect to the service that was provided.

ohwilleke
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