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Reply to "Breached Contract "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Also, if say A offers something to B with conditions, and B says I don't like all of those conditions, I can only do some of it, at that point, A's offer has been "counteroffered" and A can argue that it is not longer a valid offer that can be accepted by B. After a "counteroffer" happens, A can totally not provide the same original offer again. So in this case, depending on how the exchange went, Nanny might think that the "offer" was withdrawn. But unless you signed the contract with the new higher rate, if it was just their "offer" which the Nanny did not "accept" to make the new terms binding, the Nanny does not have legal recourse to enforce the higher rate or claim that the contract was "breached" - unless of course, there was a new contact between the two with this higher rate. [/quote] The above was added because first I thought they had a signed contract with the new higher rate, then it suddenly occurred to me that the Nanny could be mistakenly calling this a breach of contract because the verbal offer was withdrawn, but that they never came to terms/agreement on what the amended contract should be. In that case, the old contract still stands, and in the view of the law, withdrawing that offer is not actually a breach of contract situation. [/quote]
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