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Cengage Advantage Books: Essentials of the Legal Environment Today 5th Edition

Cengage Advantage Books: Essentials of the Legal Environment Today (5th Edition)

Book Edition5th Edition
Author(s)Cross, Miller
ISBN9781305262676
PublisherCengage Learning
SubjectBusiness
Chapter 12, End of Chapter, Business Scenarios and Case Problems, Exercise 12-7
Page 311

Acceptance. Judy Olsen, Kristy Johnston, and their mother, Joyce Johnston, owned seventy-eight acres of real property on Eagle Creek in Meagher County, Montana. When Joyce died, she left her interest in the property to Kristy. Kristy wrote to Judy, offering to buy Judy's interest or to sell her own interest to Judy. The letter said to "please respond to Bruce Townsend." In a letter to Kristy—not to Bruce—Judy accepted Kristy's offer to sell her interest. By that time, however, Kristy had made the same offer to sell her interest to their brother Dave, and he had accepted. Did Judy and Kristy have an enforceable binding contract? Or did Kristy's offer specifying one exclusive mode of acceptance mean that Judy's reply was not effective? Discuss. [ Olsen v. Johnston, 368 Mont. 347, 301 P.3d 791 (2013)] (See Agreement .)

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