Code: | DO413 | Acronym: | CP |
Keywords | |
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Classification | Keyword |
OFICIAL | Legal Sciences |
Active? | Yes |
Course/CS Responsible: | Law |
Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LDB | 52 | Oficial Study Plan LD | 4 | - | 6 | - |
The Private Contracts course is an option taught in the second semester of the forth grade of the First Degree in Law at the FDUP. Its aim is to complement the knowledge already acquired in the subjects taken in the General Theory of Civil Law and the Law of Obligations, in the sphere of civil and commercial contracts. The course is divided into two main parts, namely, the contracts law in general, and the special contracts law. The contracts studied in this second part are those of sale, lease and sub-contracting.
The C.U. is intended to provide 4th year students fundamental knowledge about contract law, so they can apply them later in their academic and professional life.
I - Introduction 1.Function and historical evolution of the law of contract; freedom and contractual justice; the so-called contract crisis; new contractual typology, and contractual intervention by the State. 2.The principle of vagueness in contract law and its principal impacts (typical contracts, non-typical contracts, mixed and combined contracts). 3.The subjective change in contractual relations: the cessation of contractual position (reference to transfer of credit, subrogation and assumption of debts). II – Chief characteristics of civil nominated contracts 1. Preliminary considerations. 2.Civil nominated contracts. III – Contracts for sale, lease, and sub-contracting
The course is a semester course, with four theory-practical classes taught each week. These classes include theoretical course work and a component designed to stimulate the critical capacity of the students, and help their perception of the problems studied from a practical point of view, by resolving practical cases and analysing jurisprudence. This capacity to understand and resolve situations of a practical nature, plus the ability to explain and argue, are assessed by written examination at the end of the academic year or several tests during the semester.
Designation | Weight (%) |
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Exame | 100,00 |
Total: | 100,00 |
The marks the student must get have to be equal or higher than 10, in a scale of 20 in one of the following hypotheses: a) Written final examination; b) Oral final examination
The marks are obtained in the examinations referred in “Frequency Attaining”
None
General Law and rules enforced in FDUP.
Is obtained by doing a written or an oral examination