The legal case involved a dispute over a preliminary agreement for the sale of a company. Emails were exchanged between the buyer and seller, but they did not agree on some important terms of the deal. The court analyzed whether the emails constituted a binding contract and whether the parties intended to be bound by them. The court also looked at the complexity of the agreement and whether it required a written contract. The most relevant facts to the court's analysis were the absence of a fixed price and non-compete/non-solicitation agreements, the open terms, and the complexity of the proposed agreement.
Miller v. Flegenheimer (2016)
Vermont Supreme Court
203 Vt. 620, 161 A.3d 524, 2016 VT 125
Learn more about this case at [ Ссылка ]
---
Law School Data has over 50,000 case briefs and a one-of-a-kind brief tool to instantly brief millions of US cases with just the name or case cite.
Check out all of our case briefs: [ Ссылка ]
Briefs come with built in LSDefine and DeepDive, which allow you to read as quickly or as deeply as you want. Each brief has a built in legal dictionary and recursive summaries that go into more and more detail, until you eventually hit the original case text.
Subscribe for new videos every week: [ Ссылка ]
Ещё видео!