|
|
|
|
|
by Someone1234
2807 days ago
|
|
> Intent need not be verbally communicated; any conduct that is recognized as a representation is sufficient. Indeed. You're arguing that the mere act of buying is and of itself a representation, which is erroneous. The whole rest of your arguments fall apart because that one core detail is wrong. > It absolutely holds up, in the same way that clicking an "I agree" button in an online transaction is a representation of agreement Clicking "I agree" binds both parties to a contract, but we are talking elements of civil fraud not contract law. You were arguing that consumers were committing civil fraud by pressing a buy button due to some supposed representations you're insisting they're making. Let's stay on topic here. |
|
It's not the purchase that is the representation. It is the communication that you want to fly to a particular city by placing it in the destination field or by telling it to the ticket agent.
I'm tired of arguing this to amateurs; take it to a judge and try it yourself. I'll bring the popcorn.