Contracts can be Tactfully Dangerous

Contracts can be tactfully dangerous because of the binding nature and the administrative responsibility that a contract generally requires. Under normal conditions contracts are made and only used when something goes wrong.

However, the damage that a prudent and litigiously driven contract party can cause upon an unsuspecting and insecure party is potentially insurmountable (both with business reputation and financial health).

I have been through what I feel has been my fair share of litigious battles, the biggest battle took me through 18 months of solitude and depression while I worked tirelessly to accommodate creditors, lending institutions and trade through a customers legacy of unpaid debt.

I have not fully recovered, but I have learnt a lot about contract rights, roles, responsibilities and the processes that proceed contracts when a litigious action is made in court.

For those people in business, I will try and explain some key points about contracts so as to promote your understanding and attentiveness to how contracts can be tactfully dangerous

What is a Contract?

Contracts are binding agreements, a “promise”, between parties for acknowledging the predetermined rules that each of the parties must abide by whilst reaching an agreed outcome for the duration the contract is on foot (when the contract is under affect).

The contract agreement sets out the ‘rules of engagement’ and what it means if one of the parties fail to deliver to their promise.

In construction contracts, A contract will have the principle (party writing the contract) and the supplier (party agreeing to the contract).

Who is in Control?

Contract law and case law around the world are somewhat similar, every time a case is passed down in court, it sets a precedence ‘case law’ for those similar cases going forward.

While it may always feel that court is a protector of liberty and righteousness, that is heavily debatable when it comes to contract law…..this is because contract law (at least in Australia) has some significant ethical flaws.

The general nature of forming a contract is:

This all seems really great at this stage, but contracts come with significant flaws and potential risks for each party. Those risks and flaws are what scrupulous contract administrators know all too well, they understand and normally take complete advantage of them when administering the contract tactfully against the opposing party.

Contract Flaws?

The greatest flaw with contract agreements are:

The Unwritten Rules

General Contract Administration

The party in control, is normally the party that administers the contract best “contract is king”.

A litigiously tactful party, in this instance the principle, will use there financial strength and contract nous to overcome poor administration by doing the following:

This approach works well for the party with financial health but is terrible for a business that needs to pay its creditors but is cashflow poor because of the pending action and the lack of funds…..

Duress

A party may be singing under under ‘duress’ when the other party to the contract has put pressure on them to agree (the example above).

I have been in this situation before and let me say, this is NOT where you want to be…..

As a supplier to a large litigious and well financed publicly listed company, i did not realise how tactfully dangerous they were for me when i started the project.

My situation left me with 2 choices (1) to either ‘fight us in court’, or (2) ‘agree to our conditions’.

I was handed a deed of release which entitled the principle to a huge upside for its poor administration of the contract and in return I was offered a moderate sum for which I could pay a considerable number of creditors. I was told “if the deal is not done by this afternoon you can forget it”….. what do you do? say no?

 

Written by Geoff Pike, Entrepreneur, Speaker & Business Mentor

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/geoff-pike-australia

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ABOUT GEOFF

Geoff founded a sole trader plumbing business in a remotely located and vastly underpopulated location in outback Australia. Starting business with only enough money to pay 4 weeks wages, Geoff persisted by growing the business into a multi-disciplined trade services company. Over a period of 12 years, the company Geoff established grew to employ a workforce of over 300 personnel covering an area almost half the size of Europe, receiving international award recognition with an annual revenue of over $30mil. Geoff knows what it takes to overcome adversity.

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