There can therefore be no prior assumptions, such as looking to see if words such as ‘letters of intent’ have or have not been used” Others are in reality that contract in all but name. ![]() Others are contracts falling short of the full-blown contract that is contemplated Others presage a contract and may be tantamount to an agreement ‘subject to contract’ Others are firmer but make it clear that no legal consequences ensue The learned judge in ERDC Group Ltd v Brunel University has described the actual forms than an apparent "Letter of Intent" may take as – The clients seem to be perplexed as to how a document explicitly titled as “Letter of Intent” could be construed as a “contract”. The underlying documents appears to be some incarnation of "contract" rather than "Letter of Intent" per se. We often come across documents which are expressly titled as “Letter of Intent” but the contents suggests otherwise.
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