CHAPTER 2. CONTRACTS
- Part 1. General Provisions
- Part 16. Modification of Contracts
- 28-2-1601. Alteration of oral contract by parties.
- 28-2-1602. How written contract may be altered by parties.
- 28-2-1603. through reserved.
- 28-2-1611. When written contract may be revised by court.
- 28-2-1612. Presumption that parties intended equitable agreement.
- 28-2-1613. Scope of court's inquiry.
- 28-2-1614. Specific enforcement of revised contract.
- Part 17. Extinction of Contracts -- Rescission
- 28-2-1701. How contract extinguished.
- 28-2-1702. Extinction of written contract by destruction or cancellation.
- 28-2-1703. Extinction of executory obligations of contract by destruction, cancellation, or alteration.
- 28-2-1704. through reserved.
- 28-2-1711. When party may rescind.
- 28-2-1712. When stipulation against rescission ineffective.
- 28-2-1713. How rescission accomplished.
- 28-2-1714. When rescission may be adjudged.
- 28-2-1715. When rescission may be adjudged for mistake.
- 28-2-1716. Power of court to require party rescinding to do equity.
- Part 2. Parties
- 28-2-201. Who may contract.
- 28-2-202. Contracts of persons entirely without understanding.
- 28-2-203. Contracts of persons with limited understanding.
- 28-2-204. When person of unsound mind cannot disaffirm contract.
- 28-2-205. When contract for benefit of third person may be enforced by third person.
- 28-2-206. Assignment of nonnegotiable written contract.
- Part 22. Residential Construction -- Disclosure and Warranty Requirements
- Part 3. Consent in General
- Part 4. Circumstances Which Affect Validity of Apparent Consent
- 28-2-401. When apparent consent not free.
- 28-2-402. What constitutes duress.
- 28-2-403. What constitutes menace.
- 28-2-404. Kinds of fraud.
- 28-2-405. What constitutes actual fraud.
- 28-2-406. What constitutes constructive fraud.
- 28-2-407. What constitutes undue influence.
- 28-2-408. Kinds of mistake.
- 28-2-409. What constitutes mistake of fact.
- 28-2-410. What constitutes mistake of law.
- 28-2-411. Mistake of foreign laws -- mistake of fact.
- Part 5. Communication of Consent -- Revocation of Proposal
- Part 6. Object of a Contract
- Part 7. Illegal Objects and Provisions
- 28-2-701. What is unlawful.
- 28-2-702. Contracts that violate policy of law -- exemption from responsibility.
- 28-2-703. Contracts in restraint of trade generally void.
- 28-2-704. Exception -- sale of goodwill of business.
- 28-2-705. Exception -- dissolution of partnership.
- 28-2-706. Contracts in restraint of marriage generally void.
- 28-2-707. What conditions void.
- 28-2-708. Restraints upon legal proceedings void.
- 28-2-709. Illegality of agreement to allow another person to confess judgment, accept service of process, or accept default.
- 28-2-710. through reserved.
- 28-2-721. When provision fixing liquidated damages valid.
- 28-2-722. Repealed.
- 28-2-723. Construction contracts requiring lien or bond waiver void.
- Part 8. Consideration
- 28-2-801. What constitutes good consideration.
- 28-2-802. Extent to which existing legal or moral obligation is good consideration.
- 28-2-803. Consideration to be lawful -- effect of illegality.
- 28-2-804. Written instrument presumptive evidence of consideration.
- 28-2-805. Burden of proof of want of consideration.
- 28-2-806. through reserved.
- 28-2-811. Applicability of rules concerning object to executory consideration.
- 28-2-812. How amount of executory consideration may be determined.
- 28-2-813. Determination by interested party.
- 28-2-814. Effect of impossibility of designated exclusive method of determination.
- Part 9. Written Contracts
- 28-2-901. When contracts may be oral.
- 28-2-902. Enforcement of contract not in writing through fraud.
- 28-2-903. What contracts must be in writing.
- 28-2-904. Effect of written contract on oral agreements.
- 28-2-905. When extrinsic evidence concerning a written agreement may be considered.
- 28-2-906. When written contract takes effect.
- 28-2-907. Applicability of rules concerning transfers in general.