A contract is an agreement reached by both parties, and the agreement must have the identity of both parties. However, a blank contract does not have the identity of both parties and is not a valid contract. The contract is signed and sealed by both parties, and it is difficult to tell whether one party filled it out after signing and sealing. Therefore, there is a great legal risk in signing a blank agreement. When a blank space is reserved in the contract, relevant evidence must be kept.
According to Article 490 of the General Principles of the Civil Law, if the parties conclude a contract in the form of a contract, the contract is established when the parties sign, seal or press their fingerprints. Before signing, sealing or fingerprinting, one party has fulfilled its main obligations, and the contract is established when the other party accepts it.
A contract shall be concluded in written form as stipulated by laws, administrative regulations or agreed by the parties. If the parties do not do this in writing, but one party has fulfilled its main obligations and the other party accepts it, the contract is established.
Legal objectivity:
civil law
Article 490
If the parties enter into a contract in the form of a contract, the contract shall be established when the parties sign, seal or press their fingerprints. Before signing, sealing or fingerprinting, one party has fulfilled its main obligations, and the contract is established when the other party accepts it.
A contract shall be concluded in written form as stipulated by laws, administrative regulations or agreed by the parties. If the parties do not do this in writing, but one party has fulfilled its main obligations and the other party accepts it, the contract is established.