Contract Enforceability, Voidability, and Options

A real estate contract is an invisible architecture of promises, engineered to transfer the heaviest, most permanent asset most people will ever own. When land and capital change hands, society requires more than a handshake and a gentleman’s agreement; it requires rigid structural integrity. We achieve this integrity through the law of contracts. To understand real estate transactions, you must first understand the invisible forces that bind a buyer and seller together, the specific defects that can cause those bonds to shatter, and the precise moments when a court of law will step in to enforce a promise.

A Sumerian contract for the sale of a house and field, circa 2600 BCE. Society has long required physical evidence of real estate transactions beyond a mere handshake.
A Sumerian contract for the sale of a house and field, circa 2600 BCE. Society has long required physical evidence of real estate transactions beyond a mere handshake.

As a real estate professional, you are not merely filling in blanks on a form. You are facilitating the creation of legal gravity. Whether a contract binds your client to a million-dollar purchase, traps them in a flawed agreement, or dissolves entirely into thin air depends entirely on the principles of enforceability, mutuality, and consideration.

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