Business Law 2nd Term Final 2023
What is fair use doctrine?
Allows copyrighted material to be reproduced with permission for the following reasons:
Teaching
News Reporting
Literary Criticism
School Reports
Research
What is a patent?
Gives an inventor exclusive right to make, use, or sell an invention
Lasts 20 years
What is intellectual property?
An original work fixed in a tangible medium of expression.
Patents, copyrights, and trademarks assure that the rightful owners of intellectual property will have exclusive rights to their creations
Cost of patent?
$900 to do it yourself and $5,000-$10,000 with a lawyer
What are the requirements of an invention?
must be useful
must consist of a new idea
What do you have to do to use someone’s patent?
The owner gives you permission to use it or give you the license.
What is a copyright?
Gives an author, composer, photographer, etc. exclusive right to publish and sell artistic or literary work.
Protection last the life of the author + 70 years.
Cost of copyright?
$35-$55 for do-it-yourself
$250-$500 with a lawyer
What are trademarks?
Trademarks give exclusive right to use a particular word, name, or symbol to distinguish a product or business
Cost of trademark?
$225-$600
What is real property?
Land and anything connected to it, in the earth below, in the air above.
Items permanently attached to property (ex. built in stoves)
What is personal property?
Everything other than real property that can be owned
What is tangible personal property?
Property that has substance and can be touched
What is intangible personal property?
Property that has NO substance and cannot be touched
How is property acquired?
Purchase
Gift
Inheritance
What must you do if you find a LOST item?
Try and find the owner
Advertise for the true owner
Leave the item with the police
What must you do with MISPLACED property?
Leave the item with the business owner or find the owner.
What is abandoned property?
Property discarded by the owner without the intent to reclaim it
Three requirements of a gift of personal property?
The donor must intend to make the gift
The gift must be delivered
The donee must accept the gift
Who is the lessee?
The lessee is the tenant
Who is the lessor?
The lessor is the landlord
What is waste?
Waste is damaging or destroying the property.
What is a tenancy?
Tenancy is when tenants own an interest in the real estate they lease. This is also called a leasehold estate.
What are the characteristics of Tenancy for Years?
Any lease with a set determination date whether 1 day, 5 months, or `5 years.
Some states require this tenancy to be in writing; ther states require it to be in writing if it exceeds a year
What are the characteristics of Periodic Tenancy?
Runs from one period to another like year-to-year or month-to-month
Lease renews itself for the next period unless one party notifies the other of termination
What are the characteristics of Tenancy at Sufferance?
A holdover tenancy
Comes about when the tenant does not leave the property after the tenancy has expired
Tenant is not entitled to notice to vacate but it is liable to pay rent for illegal occupancy
What are the characteristics of Tenancy at Will?
Continues for an indefinite period of time
Does not require a written agreement to create the tenancy
Terminated only when one party gives notice of usually 30 days
What is a lease?
A lease is a written agreement between a lessor and a lesse. A lease creates a landlord-tenant relationship and provides the tenant with exclusive possession and control.
What are covenants to a lease?
Covenants to a lease are terms of the lease that gives right and duties of the landlord and tenant
What is eviction?
Eviction is when a landlord deprives a tenant of the possession of the premises.
Who carries out eviction?
A court appointed officer carries out an eviction.
What is constructive eviction?
Constructive eviction is when a landlord breaches a duty under a lease
What is the law of habitability?
Law of habitability states that the dwelling must be clean, properly heated, furnished with utilities, and safe.
What is a sublease?
A sublease is the transfer of part of the term of a lease, but not the remainder of it, to someone else.
When can a sublease occur?
A sublease can occur when someone is subletting as they are leaving town for a few days and need someone to reside in the property.
What is a fixture?
A fixture is an item of personal property attached to the property in such a way that they become real property.
What is a trade fixture?
A trade fixture is a fixture attached to business property that is needed to carry on the business.
When is the landlord liable for injuries?
A landlord is liable for injuries when injuries occur due to negligence in places such as hallways and stairways.
When is the tenant liable for injuries?
A tenant is held liable for injuries when it is a defect in private areas within the leased property.
What is a negotiable instrument?
A negotiable instrument is a commercial paper that is a written document giving legal rights that may be passed to others by endorsement or delivery.
What are the requirements when writing a negotiable instrument?
Must be a written instrument, signature of maker/drawer, unconditional promise or order, fixed sum of money,payable on demand or at a definite time, payable to order or bearer, dates and controlling words.
What is the most common negotiable instrument?
A check.
What is an example of a draft?
A check.
What is an example of a note?
A loan or CD.
What are the 3 types of endorsements?
Blank endorsement, restrictive endorsement, and special/full endorsement.
Characteristics of blank endorsement?
Simplest type of endorsement
Least safe endorsement
Signing your name in cursive only
Use this type only when at bank ready to cash or deposit
This is made payable to two people and both must endorse or one or the other person can endorse.
Characteristics of restrictive endorsement?
Safest type of endorsement
Used for individuals and businesses.
Characteristics of special/full endorsement?
Used to transfer the check to someone else.
No one else but that person can cash it.
Pay to the order of…
New person’s name transferring check to original person’s signature.
Examples of blank endorsement?
Check made out to Joe AND Kelly Small (both sign)
Check made out to Joe OR Kelly Small (only 1 has to sign)
Example of restrictive endorsement?
Individual- Write “For Deposit Only”, acct #, then sign
Business- Write “For Deposit Only” acct # (if given), then sign business name
Example of special/full endorsement?
Transfer a check to Kim Allen (Kim Allen’s name first then your signature)
Check when Kim Allen cashes it reads as follows: “Pay to the order of: Kim Allen, Name, and Kim Allen.
Where is an endorsement made on the check?
An endorsement is made on the back of the check, on the trailing end
Who is the maker of a note?
The person who promises to pay money in a note.
Who is the payee of a note?
To whom the promise to pay is made.
What is the purpose of the ABA number?
To identify the bank’s location, the bank, and the federal reserve routing number.
What is the purpose of certified checks?
The purpose of certified checks is it is your personal check guaranteed by the bank for payment due to you having the money in the bank.
What is the purpose of cashier’s checks?
The purpose of cashier’s checks is that it is guaranteed by the bank, drawn on the bank’s own funds, and signed by the teller.
What is the purpose of money orders?
The purpose of money orders is to have a substitute for a check that is purchased from banks, most offices, or other places for a specific amount.
Canceled checks
Canceled checks are checks that are believed to be lost or stolen so you either write a stop payment order which is binding for six months unless renewed in writing or tell the bank the stop payment order which is binding for 14 calendar days unless confirmed in writing.
If the bank pays the check after a stop payment order has been made the bank is liable for the loss you incur.
If someone issues a stop payment and an amount is actually owed, the person is still responsible for paying that debt amount.
Outstanding checks
Checks you have written and recorded but not processed by the bank yet.
Bad check
Also called a bounced check.
Check written on an account that does not have enough funds to cover it. (insufficient funds)
Stale check
A stale check is a check that is more than six months old.
Bank may refuse to pay the stale check.
Non-sufficient funds
When a check is written on an account that does not have enough funds to cover it (same as bounced checks)
Signature card
A record kept at the bank that is used to identify your signature that should be used when signing your checks
Material alteration
Someone charges a check you wrote through no fault of yours (meaning you wrote it correctly but someone adds an extra “0” to the amount)
Draft
An order to a third party to pay money (checks).
Note
A written promise to pay money
Commercial paper
A type of contract governed by Uniform Commercial code rather than general contract law.
Payee
Person in a note to whom the promise to pay is made
Drawee
The person to whom an order is given to pay money in a draft (bank)
Drawer
A person who orders money to be paid in a draft (you)
Maker
Person who promises to pay money in a note
Endorsement
The act of placing one’s signature on an instrument, usually on the back, to transfer it to another.
Stop payment
Canceling a check before it has been paid by the bank.
Know Characteristics of the 3 C’s of credit.
Capacity- refers to one’s ability to repay a debt
Character- refers to one’s honesty & reliability to pay a debt
Collateral- refers to assets one has that can be sold if one cannot repay the debt
Know questions asked to identify the 3 C’ s of credit.
Capacity- steady job, salary, reliable income, current debts?
Character- used credit before, pay bills on time, good credit report, provide character references?
Collateral- have a checking account, savings account, own any stocks or bonds, own a car, own a boat?
What are the 3 major credit bureaus in the U.S?
TransUnion, Experian, Equifax
What is the purpose of a credit bureau?
Obtain credit information and history on a person, generate your credit report for people who want it, and all credit bureaus can be a little different with the information that they gather.
What is the lowest credit score before someone risks being able to get a loan?
650
What are 2 forms of credit?
Open end credit and closed end credit
When financing a vehicle, what must be disclosed to the borrower?
Finance charge and APR
Know characteristics and examples of open-end credit
Open-end credit is credit that can be increased by the debtor by continuing to buy goods on credit up to a certain amount
A line of credit is given to this person.
Examples are Visa, MasterCard, store credit cards like Macy’s.
Know characteristics and examples of closed-end credit
Credit that is given a specific amount which cannot be increased by making additional purchases.
A person borrows a fixed amount with this type of credit and makes monthly installment payments.
Examples are car loan, house loan, and boat loan.
Know characteristics of a high credit score
You handle credit well.
You pay credit card bills and are on time.
Your balance is paid off each month.
Lower credit risk so your interest rate will be lower.
Know characteristics of a low credit score
High amount of debt
Do not pay bills on time
Higher interest rates
Secured loan
A loan which is backed up by property that the creditor can take if the loan is not repaid
Unsecured loan
Three loans require no collateral
Interest rate is much higher
Only available to well-established business
Collateral
Refers to assets one has that can be sold if one cannot repay the debt
Interest
Fee creditors charge for lending money or extending credit
Credit report
A record of one’s credit history.
Credit score
A number the credit industry gives a person based on how they have used or misused their credit.
Default
Failure to make timely payments on a loan
Credit
An arrangement in which you receive cash, goods, or services now and pay in the future
Creditor
The party who sells the goods on credit or lends the money
Debtor
The party who buys the goods on credit or borrowing the money
Line of credit
A maximum amount of money available to that person
Guarantor
Referred to as a secondary party, agrees to pay off the debt ONLY if the debtor defaults
Surety
Referred to as a primary party, agrees to pay off the debt outright just like the debtor would
What is fair use doctrine?
Allows copyrighted material to be reproduced with permission for the following reasons:
Teaching
News Reporting
Literary Criticism
School Reports
Research
What is a patent?
Gives an inventor exclusive right to make, use, or sell an invention
Lasts 20 years
What is intellectual property?
An original work fixed in a tangible medium of expression.
Patents, copyrights, and trademarks assure that the rightful owners of intellectual property will have exclusive rights to their creations
Cost of patent?
$900 to do it yourself and $5,000-$10,000 with a lawyer
What are the requirements of an invention?
must be useful
must consist of a new idea
What do you have to do to use someone’s patent?
The owner gives you permission to use it or give you the license.
What is a copyright?
Gives an author, composer, photographer, etc. exclusive right to publish and sell artistic or literary work.
Protection last the life of the author + 70 years.
Cost of copyright?
$35-$55 for do-it-yourself
$250-$500 with a lawyer
What are trademarks?
Trademarks give exclusive right to use a particular word, name, or symbol to distinguish a product or business
Cost of trademark?
$225-$600
What is real property?
Land and anything connected to it, in the earth below, in the air above.
Items permanently attached to property (ex. built in stoves)
What is personal property?
Everything other than real property that can be owned
What is tangible personal property?
Property that has substance and can be touched
What is intangible personal property?
Property that has NO substance and cannot be touched
How is property acquired?
Purchase
Gift
Inheritance
What must you do if you find a LOST item?
Try and find the owner
Advertise for the true owner
Leave the item with the police
What must you do with MISPLACED property?
Leave the item with the business owner or find the owner.
What is abandoned property?
Property discarded by the owner without the intent to reclaim it
Three requirements of a gift of personal property?
The donor must intend to make the gift
The gift must be delivered
The donee must accept the gift
Who is the lessee?
The lessee is the tenant
Who is the lessor?
The lessor is the landlord
What is waste?
Waste is damaging or destroying the property.
What is a tenancy?
Tenancy is when tenants own an interest in the real estate they lease. This is also called a leasehold estate.
What are the characteristics of Tenancy for Years?
Any lease with a set determination date whether 1 day, 5 months, or `5 years.
Some states require this tenancy to be in writing; ther states require it to be in writing if it exceeds a year
What are the characteristics of Periodic Tenancy?
Runs from one period to another like year-to-year or month-to-month
Lease renews itself for the next period unless one party notifies the other of termination
What are the characteristics of Tenancy at Sufferance?
A holdover tenancy
Comes about when the tenant does not leave the property after the tenancy has expired
Tenant is not entitled to notice to vacate but it is liable to pay rent for illegal occupancy
What are the characteristics of Tenancy at Will?
Continues for an indefinite period of time
Does not require a written agreement to create the tenancy
Terminated only when one party gives notice of usually 30 days
What is a lease?
A lease is a written agreement between a lessor and a lesse. A lease creates a landlord-tenant relationship and provides the tenant with exclusive possession and control.
What are covenants to a lease?
Covenants to a lease are terms of the lease that gives right and duties of the landlord and tenant
What is eviction?
Eviction is when a landlord deprives a tenant of the possession of the premises.
Who carries out eviction?
A court appointed officer carries out an eviction.
What is constructive eviction?
Constructive eviction is when a landlord breaches a duty under a lease
What is the law of habitability?
Law of habitability states that the dwelling must be clean, properly heated, furnished with utilities, and safe.
What is a sublease?
A sublease is the transfer of part of the term of a lease, but not the remainder of it, to someone else.
When can a sublease occur?
A sublease can occur when someone is subletting as they are leaving town for a few days and need someone to reside in the property.
What is a fixture?
A fixture is an item of personal property attached to the property in such a way that they become real property.
What is a trade fixture?
A trade fixture is a fixture attached to business property that is needed to carry on the business.
When is the landlord liable for injuries?
A landlord is liable for injuries when injuries occur due to negligence in places such as hallways and stairways.
When is the tenant liable for injuries?
A tenant is held liable for injuries when it is a defect in private areas within the leased property.
What is a negotiable instrument?
A negotiable instrument is a commercial paper that is a written document giving legal rights that may be passed to others by endorsement or delivery.
What are the requirements when writing a negotiable instrument?
Must be a written instrument, signature of maker/drawer, unconditional promise or order, fixed sum of money,payable on demand or at a definite time, payable to order or bearer, dates and controlling words.
What is the most common negotiable instrument?
A check.
What is an example of a draft?
A check.
What is an example of a note?
A loan or CD.
What are the 3 types of endorsements?
Blank endorsement, restrictive endorsement, and special/full endorsement.
Characteristics of blank endorsement?
Simplest type of endorsement
Least safe endorsement
Signing your name in cursive only
Use this type only when at bank ready to cash or deposit
This is made payable to two people and both must endorse or one or the other person can endorse.
Characteristics of restrictive endorsement?
Safest type of endorsement
Used for individuals and businesses.
Characteristics of special/full endorsement?
Used to transfer the check to someone else.
No one else but that person can cash it.
Pay to the order of…
New person’s name transferring check to original person’s signature.
Examples of blank endorsement?
Check made out to Joe AND Kelly Small (both sign)
Check made out to Joe OR Kelly Small (only 1 has to sign)
Example of restrictive endorsement?
Individual- Write “For Deposit Only”, acct #, then sign
Business- Write “For Deposit Only” acct # (if given), then sign business name
Example of special/full endorsement?
Transfer a check to Kim Allen (Kim Allen’s name first then your signature)
Check when Kim Allen cashes it reads as follows: “Pay to the order of: Kim Allen, Name, and Kim Allen.
Where is an endorsement made on the check?
An endorsement is made on the back of the check, on the trailing end
Who is the maker of a note?
The person who promises to pay money in a note.
Who is the payee of a note?
To whom the promise to pay is made.
What is the purpose of the ABA number?
To identify the bank’s location, the bank, and the federal reserve routing number.
What is the purpose of certified checks?
The purpose of certified checks is it is your personal check guaranteed by the bank for payment due to you having the money in the bank.
What is the purpose of cashier’s checks?
The purpose of cashier’s checks is that it is guaranteed by the bank, drawn on the bank’s own funds, and signed by the teller.
What is the purpose of money orders?
The purpose of money orders is to have a substitute for a check that is purchased from banks, most offices, or other places for a specific amount.
Canceled checks
Canceled checks are checks that are believed to be lost or stolen so you either write a stop payment order which is binding for six months unless renewed in writing or tell the bank the stop payment order which is binding for 14 calendar days unless confirmed in writing.
If the bank pays the check after a stop payment order has been made the bank is liable for the loss you incur.
If someone issues a stop payment and an amount is actually owed, the person is still responsible for paying that debt amount.
Outstanding checks
Checks you have written and recorded but not processed by the bank yet.
Bad check
Also called a bounced check.
Check written on an account that does not have enough funds to cover it. (insufficient funds)
Stale check
A stale check is a check that is more than six months old.
Bank may refuse to pay the stale check.
Non-sufficient funds
When a check is written on an account that does not have enough funds to cover it (same as bounced checks)
Signature card
A record kept at the bank that is used to identify your signature that should be used when signing your checks
Material alteration
Someone charges a check you wrote through no fault of yours (meaning you wrote it correctly but someone adds an extra “0” to the amount)
Draft
An order to a third party to pay money (checks).
Note
A written promise to pay money
Commercial paper
A type of contract governed by Uniform Commercial code rather than general contract law.
Payee
Person in a note to whom the promise to pay is made
Drawee
The person to whom an order is given to pay money in a draft (bank)
Drawer
A person who orders money to be paid in a draft (you)
Maker
Person who promises to pay money in a note
Endorsement
The act of placing one’s signature on an instrument, usually on the back, to transfer it to another.
Stop payment
Canceling a check before it has been paid by the bank.
Know Characteristics of the 3 C’s of credit.
Capacity- refers to one’s ability to repay a debt
Character- refers to one’s honesty & reliability to pay a debt
Collateral- refers to assets one has that can be sold if one cannot repay the debt
Know questions asked to identify the 3 C’ s of credit.
Capacity- steady job, salary, reliable income, current debts?
Character- used credit before, pay bills on time, good credit report, provide character references?
Collateral- have a checking account, savings account, own any stocks or bonds, own a car, own a boat?
What are the 3 major credit bureaus in the U.S?
TransUnion, Experian, Equifax
What is the purpose of a credit bureau?
Obtain credit information and history on a person, generate your credit report for people who want it, and all credit bureaus can be a little different with the information that they gather.
What is the lowest credit score before someone risks being able to get a loan?
650
What are 2 forms of credit?
Open end credit and closed end credit
When financing a vehicle, what must be disclosed to the borrower?
Finance charge and APR
Know characteristics and examples of open-end credit
Open-end credit is credit that can be increased by the debtor by continuing to buy goods on credit up to a certain amount
A line of credit is given to this person.
Examples are Visa, MasterCard, store credit cards like Macy’s.
Know characteristics and examples of closed-end credit
Credit that is given a specific amount which cannot be increased by making additional purchases.
A person borrows a fixed amount with this type of credit and makes monthly installment payments.
Examples are car loan, house loan, and boat loan.
Know characteristics of a high credit score
You handle credit well.
You pay credit card bills and are on time.
Your balance is paid off each month.
Lower credit risk so your interest rate will be lower.
Know characteristics of a low credit score
High amount of debt
Do not pay bills on time
Higher interest rates
Secured loan
A loan which is backed up by property that the creditor can take if the loan is not repaid
Unsecured loan
Three loans require no collateral
Interest rate is much higher
Only available to well-established business
Collateral
Refers to assets one has that can be sold if one cannot repay the debt
Interest
Fee creditors charge for lending money or extending credit
Credit report
A record of one’s credit history.
Credit score
A number the credit industry gives a person based on how they have used or misused their credit.
Default
Failure to make timely payments on a loan
Credit
An arrangement in which you receive cash, goods, or services now and pay in the future
Creditor
The party who sells the goods on credit or lends the money
Debtor
The party who buys the goods on credit or borrowing the money
Line of credit
A maximum amount of money available to that person
Guarantor
Referred to as a secondary party, agrees to pay off the debt ONLY if the debtor defaults
Surety
Referred to as a primary party, agrees to pay off the debt outright just like the debtor would