Posts on Contracts

  1. Uniform Commercial Code
  2. Statute of Frauds

Business law

A. Agency (Click here to see posts on this topic)
1. Formation and termination
2. Duties and authority of agents and principals
3. Liabilities and authority of agents and principals

B. Contracts (Click here to see posts on this topic)
1. Formation
2. Performance
3. Third-party assignments
4. Discharge, breach, and remedies

C. Debtor-creditor relationships (Click here to see posts on this topic)
1. Rights, duties, and liabilities of debtors, creditors, and guarantors
2. Bankruptcy

D. Government regulation of business (Click here to see posts on this topic)
1. Federal securities acts
2. Other government regulation (antitrust, pension and retirement plans, union and employee relations, and legal liability for payroll and social security taxes)

E. Uniform commercial code (Click here to see posts on this topic)
1. Negotiable instruments and letters of credit
2. Sales
3. Secured transactions
4. Documents of title and title transfer

F. Real property, including insurance (Click here to see posts on this topic)

Uniform Commercial Code

The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC or the Code), first published in 1952, is one of a number of uniform acts that have been promulgated in conjunction with efforts to harmonize the law of sales and other commercial transactions in all 50 states within the United States of America. This objective is deemed important because of the prevalence of commercial transactions that extend beyond one state (for example, where the goods are manufactured in state A, warehoused in state B, sold from state C and delivered in state D). The UCC deals primarily with transactions involving personal property (movable property), not real property (immovable property).

The UCC is the longest and most elaborate of the uniform acts. It has been a long-term, joint project of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) and the American Law Institute (ALI).[1] Judge Herbert F. Goodrich was the Chairman of the Editorial Board of the original 1952 edition,[2] and the Code itself was drafted by some of the top legal scholars in the United States, including Karl N. Llewellyn, William A. Schnader, Soia Mentschikoff, and Grant Gilmore. The Code, as the product of private organizations, is not itself the law, but only recommendation of the laws that should be adopted in the states. Once enacted in a state by the state's legislature, it becomes true law and is codified into the state’s code of statutes. When the Code is adopted by a state, it may be adopted verbatim as written by ALI and NCCUSL, or it may be adopted with specific changes deemed necessary by the state legislature. Unless such changes are minor, they can affect the purpose of the Code in promoting uniformity of law among the various states.

The ALI and NCCUSL have also established a permanent editorial board for the Code. This board has issued a number of official comments and other published papers concerning the Code. Although these commentaries do not have the force of law, courts interpreting the Code often cite them as persuasive authority in determining the effect of one or more provisions. Courts interpreting the Code generally seek to harmonize their interpretations with those of other states that have adopted the same or a similar provision, except where specific aspects of the Code were changed by that state when adopting it, or where other aspects of state law require a different decision.

The Code, in one or another of its several revisions, has been enacted in all of the 50 states, as well as in the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Louisiana has enacted most provisions of the UCC with the exception of Article 2, preferring to maintain its own civil law tradition for governing the sale of goods.

Although the substantive content is largely similar, some states have made structural modifications to conform to local legislative customs. For example, Louisiana jurisprudence refers to the major subdivisions of the UCC as “chapters” instead of articles, since the term “articles” is used in that state to refer to provisions of the Louisiana Civil Code. Arkansas has a similar arrangement as the term “article” in that state's law generally refers to a subdivision of the Arkansas Constitution. In California, they are titled "divisions" instead of articles, because in California, articles are a third- or fourth-level subdivision of a code, while divisions are always the first-level subdivision. Also, California does not allow the use of hyphens in section numbers because they are reserved for referring to ranges of sections; therefore, the hyphens used in the official UCC section numbers are dropped in the California implementation.


More about this article : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Commercial_Code

Other Links :

http://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/2/article2.htm#s2-201


Statute of Frauds

Other Links:

http://www.expertlaw.com/library/business/statute_of_frauds.html
Statute of frauds -- Contracts to be written.
http://ask.reference.com/related/Statute+of+Frauds+in+Contracts?qsrc=2892&l=dir&o=10601
http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?activeTextDocId=1518462
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statute_of_frauds

REG exam structure and weightage




I. Ethics and professional and legal responsibilities (15%–20%)
II. Business law (20%–25%)
III. Federal tax procedures and accounting issues (8%–12%)
IV. Federal taxation of property transactions (8%–12%)
V. Federal taxation—individuals (12%–18%)
VI. Federal taxation—entities (22%–28%)

Managing Stress

After my Last exam experience.I included stress management as one of my important course, In addition to my regular study course.
As I am not a qualified person to write articles on what stress is, I read some wonderful articles and watched good videos that helped me.

So I thought why don't I refer them to you? Here are few links which can help you.

http://helpguide.org/mental/stress_management_relief_coping.htm
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~acskills/videos/video_sm.html