3565 Confirmation of Proposta Irrevocabile D'acquisto
I have read all the replies to my thread concerning the Proposta, but a friend has told me that the Proposta is legal if at the time of compiling, both parties are obviously present and the Vendor can sign at the bottom of the form that they have accepted the Buyers offer and can put a signature on this and it is legal, but another person has told me that the Confirmation should be sent to the Buyer by registered mail and be a seperate document, which is correct and legal? Brendon
Category
Legal
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 05/07/2006 - 09:45
[QUOTE=brendon collins]I have read all the replies to my thread concerning the Proposta, but a friend has told me that the Proposta is legal if at the time of compiling, both parties are obviously present and the Vendor can sign at the bottom of the form that they have accepted the Buyers offer and can put a signature on this and it is legal, but another person has told me that the Confirmation should be sent to the Buyer by registered mail and be a seperate document, which is correct and legal? Brendon[/QUOTE]
Thay are both correct, because there's not only one way to close a contract: it is assentially an exchange of offer and counter-offer and this could happen and go on for a long time, with different documents or in a single document, with a single offer and a quick acceptance.
The buyer can write his "proposta" even if the vendor isn't present, the vendor accepts the "proposta" signing the document he received from the buyer, or a even a separate document (but without differen clauses) and when the buyer has knowledge of the acceptance\confirmation, the contract is closed and valid.
It is evident that some options give more warrantees, so if you send you offer or acceptance by mail, it is proved that you send it in that specific day
[QUOTE=brendon collins]I have read all the replies to my thread concerning the Proposta, but a friend has told me that the Proposta is legal if at the time of compiling, both parties are obviously present and the Vendor can sign at the bottom of the form that they have accepted the Buyers offer and can put a signature on this and it is legal, but another person has told me that the Confirmation should be sent to the Buyer by registered mail and be a seperate document, which is correct and legal? Brendon[/QUOTE]
Thay are both correct, because there's not only one way to close a contract: it is assentially an exchange of offer and counter-offer and this could happen and go on for a long time, with different documents or in a single document, with a single offer and a quick acceptance.
The buyer can write his "proposta" even if the vendor isn't present, the vendor accepts the "proposta" signing the document he received from the buyer, or a even a separate document (but without differen clauses) and when the buyer has knowledge of the acceptance\confirmation, the contract is closed and valid.
It is evident that some options give more warrantees, so if you send you offer or acceptance by mail, it is proved that you send it in that specific day