Q1: What area of law does Austin v. Burge primarily address?
Contracts
Q2: What was the central legal issue in Austin v. Burge?
Whether a person who knowingly receives, retains, and uses a regularly delivered newspaper, without expressly ordering it, is liable for the subscription price on an implied-in-fact contract theory.
Q3: What rule did the court apply?
An implied-in-fact contract arises where the parties' conduct, viewed objectively, manifests mutual assent and a reasonable expectation of compensation. When a person knowingly accepts and retains goods or services under circumstances indicating that the provider expects payment, and the recipient has a fair opportunity to reject but does not, the law implies a promise to pay the reasonable value of what is received—often evidenced by the standard or stated price. Mere silence does not ordinarily constitute acceptance, but silence coupled with knowing retention and use of benefits can constitute acceptance by conduct.
Q4: What was the court's holding?
Yes. By knowingly accepting and using the newspapers without effective rejection, the defendant became obligated to pay the subscription price under an implied-in-fact contract.
Q5: Why is Austin v. Burge significant?
Austin v. Burge is a leading example of acceptance by conduct and the implied-in-fact contract doctrine. It clarifies when silence, coupled with knowing retention of benefits, crosses the line into assent, and it underscores the recipient's duty to reject or notify promptly if he does not intend to be bound. The case helps students distinguish implied-in-fact contracts (true consensual agreements inferred from conduct) from quasi-contract or unjust enrichment (obligations imposed by law absent assent). It also illustrates practical proof problems: how standardized prices can establish reasonable value and how a defendant's course of dealing can substitute for express words of agreement.