Brewer v. Austin, 989 F.3d 356 (6th Cir. 2023)
In Brewer v. Austin, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals confronted the nuanced legal question of what constitutes valid consideration in contract formation.
Does Brewer's provision of strategic business advice to Austin constitute valid consideration sufficient to enforce Austin's promise of profit sharing?
Consideration in contract law is defined as a bargained-for exchange in which there is a detriment to the promisee or a benefit to the promisor. Consideration must be something of value and exchanged between the parties to render the contract enforceable.
The court held that Brewer's provision of strategic business advice did constitute valid consideration. The court found that Brewer's efforts had a quantifiable benefit to Austin, which represented a bargained-for exchange sufficient to support the promise of profit sharing.
This case is significant because it clarifies that consideration in contract law encompasses non-monetary contributions that provide real, substantive value. For law students, Brewer v. Austin serves as a critical reminder to evaluate the context of contractual exchanges critically, allowing for a broader perspective of what constitutes valuable consideration. The decision reinforces the importance of understanding both the legal and practical elements of mutual exchange in contract enforcement.