Mottenhausen
2018-12-12 00:14:53
- #1
The example is wrong.
1. you have a written contract with your bank regarding the management of the depot,
in which you
2. have given your bank written consent to also execute purchase orders given orally by phone on your behalf.
But this has nothing to do with the example. The myth of the "oral lease contract" also comes only from the history book or rather the fairy tale book and stubbornly persists in today's forum culture. Does anyone here know someone who has an oral lease contract for their apartment or house? I believe it is only the sensational headlines from the tenant's association... "oral lease contracts are also valid... blah blah" About which Grandpa Karl is always happy, who once made an oral usage agreement in 1963 with Uncle Günther about the extension of the shed, which hasn't even existed since 1985.
Of course it is common in construction, what else should the roofer do, drive back to the company to write a contract and have it signed. But when push comes to shove, his orally received order is worth nothing.
1. you have a written contract with your bank regarding the management of the depot,
in which you
2. have given your bank written consent to also execute purchase orders given orally by phone on your behalf.
But this has nothing to do with the example. The myth of the "oral lease contract" also comes only from the history book or rather the fairy tale book and stubbornly persists in today's forum culture. Does anyone here know someone who has an oral lease contract for their apartment or house? I believe it is only the sensational headlines from the tenant's association... "oral lease contracts are also valid... blah blah" About which Grandpa Karl is always happy, who once made an oral usage agreement in 1963 with Uncle Günther about the extension of the shed, which hasn't even existed since 1985.
Of course it is common in construction, what else should the roofer do, drive back to the company to write a contract and have it signed. But when push comes to shove, his orally received order is worth nothing.