代写 MLC101 – Business Law Case Study Report

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  • 代写 MLC101 – Business Law Case Study Report 
    MLC101 – Business Law  
    T3, 2016 
    Assessment Two– Case Study Report 
    Learning Outcome Detail 
    Unit Learning Outcome (ULO)  Graduate Learning Outcome 
    (GLO) 
    ULO 1: Explain and apply the fundamental principles of the 
    law governing business in Australia (law of contract, 
    consumer protection, legal entities such as agency, 
    partnerships and corporations law and negligent 
    misstatements/product liability) in order to solve business 
    law problems. 
    GLO1: Discipline-specific 
    knowledge and 
    capabilities  
    GLO5: Problem solving 
    ULO 2:  Critically evaluate the fundamental principles 
    underlying the legal concepts governing businesses in 
    Australia. 
    GLO4: Critical thinking 
    ULO 3: Use scholarly sources to critically examine concepts 
    relating to Business 
    Law in an international context. 
    GLO3: Digital literacy 
    GLO8: Global citizenship 
    Assessment Feedback: 
    Students who submit their work by the due date will receive their marks and feedback on 
    CloudDeakin on 07/02/2017, 5:30PM   
    Page 2 of 4 
    Description / Requirements 
    Assessment: Case study is worth 20% of the final mark.
Word Count: 1500 words excluding 
    citations, quotations, footnotes and bibliography (10% leeway).  
    Case study assignment question:  
    Lisa is a small business owner. Her business interests include a coffee shop and a small variety store 
    in Laverton. 
    She pays $850 per week for the coffee shop in a new shopping centre in Laverton. She thought this 
    would make a great investment considering the expansion of the suburb and construction of large 
    new residential developments in the area.  Five months into the lease she realised that her business 
    is not growing as she expected. She decides to speak to the landlord, David, who also happens to be 
    her brother-in-law. David decides to reduce her weekly rent to $550 a week until business improves. 
    For the next two and half years she paid the reduced rent. In the meantime, she starts to think of 
    moving to another shopping centre not far from her current coffee shop for business reasons as well 
    as due to breakdown of her marriage as she did not want to deal with her brother-in-law anymore. 
    David learns of her plans from third parties and seeks payment of the rent foregone in the past two 
    years. 
    After the breakdown of her marriage, Lisa decided to move on and determined to build a new house 
    in a residential estate in a nearby suburb of Truganina. She contacts Allen Family Homes Pty Ltd, a 
    company which seems to have a good reputation in the area for building affordable homes. She 
    pays a visit to the company’s display home where she was shown a very beautiful 3 bedroom house. 
    The brochures she was shown contains glossy artist’s impression of the house and standard 
    inclusions.  She was so pleased with the size and presentation of the house. She was particularly 
    very happy with the garden landscape, kitchen appliances and bathroom fixtures. What particularly 
    excited her most is the fact that there is a proposed train station at a walking distance from her 
    future home as shown on the masterplan of the estate. She pays the deposit immediately and signs 
    the builder’s standard contract. The builder finished the house in about four months. On the 
    handover inspection date, she discovers that garden landscape, the bathroom fixtures and kitchen 
    appliances that she saw at the display house are missing. The builder points to the signed contract 
    which does not mention anything about these. She also learns that the proposed train station is for 
    the year 2030.  
    The success of her coffee shop is in part due to excellent coffee brewing skills of her barista, Ashley. 
    In fact, most regular customers come to the coffee shop because of the excellent coffee Ashley 
    makes. Ashley and Lisa have a verbal agreement that Ashley would move with Lisa to a new 
    location when that is found necessary and that she will not undertake to work for other coffee shops 
    in the same shopping complex as that of Lisa’s for two years. Shortly after the move, Ashley reneges 
    on her promise and decides to work for another coffee shop.  
    Based on the above hypothetical scenario answer the following three questions.  
    Page 3 of 4 
    1.  Is Lisa contractually obligated to pay the rental arrears of two and half years to David? Why? 
    Support your answers with relevant legal authorities (500 words) 
    2.  Does Lisa have any valid contractual claim against Allen Family Homes Pty Ltd for issues 
    relating to landscaping, bathroom fixtures, kitchen appliances and proposed train station? 
    Why? Support your answers with relevant legal authorities. Do not consider implications 
    under Australian Consumer Law or Law of Negligence. (500 words) 
    3.  Does Lisa have a contractual right to stop Ashley from working for a competing coffee shop 
    in the same shopping complex? Why? Support your answers with relevant legal authorities 
    (500) words) 
    Submission Instructions 
    Submission must be received on CloudDeakin on or before 11.59 pm on Monday, 16 January 2017.  
    The Assignment Drop Box (Assessment 2) will remain open for additional five days for those who 
    submit late subject to penalty. See newly adopted Faculty penalty rules below.  Please disregard 
    penalty related information on unit guide as this information is superseded by a newer rule 
    adopted recently. 
    Emailed or faxed submissions WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED for any reason other than due to a 
    CloudDeakin failure (the Unit Team can verify this from CloudDeakin). You must submit your 
    assignment to the Assignment Dropbox T3 2016 MLC101 Assessment 2 folder. 
    You must reference your written assignment in accordance with the Deakin Harvard Referencing 
    Guide. Specifically, please refer to the ‘Legal sources’ referencing section within the Deakin 
    Harvard Referencing Guide:  http://www.deakin.edu.au/students/studying/study-
    support/referencing/harvard or click here for  Harvard style of referencing 
    Please refer to the Marking Rubric to ensure you follow the guidelines carefully to avoid losing 
    marks for unnecessary mistakes and omissions.  
 
    You must keep a backup copy of every assignment you submit, until  the marked assignment has 
    been  returned  to you.    In  the unlikely event  that one of your assignments  is misplaced, you will 
    need to submit your backup copy. 
    Any work you submit may be checked by electronic or other means for the purposes of detecting 
    collusion and/or plagiarism. 
    When  you  are  required  to  submit  an  assignment  through  your  CloudDeakin  unit  site, you  will 
    receive an email to your Deakin email address confirming that  it has been submitted. You should  
    Page 4 of 4 
    check that you can see your assignment in the Submissions view of the Assignment dropbox folder 
    after upload, and check for, and keep, the email receipt for the submission. 
    Additional Notes 
      Penalties  for  late  submission: The  following marking penalties will apply  if  you  submit an 
    assessment  task  after  the  due  date without  an  approved  extension:  5% will  be  deducted 
    from available marks for each day up to five days, and work that is submitted more than five 
    days after  the due date will not be marked. You will  receive 0%  for  the  task.  'Day' means 
    working  day  for paper  submissions  and  calendar  day  for  electronic  submissions.  The Unit 
    Chair may  refuse  to accept a  late submission where  it  is unreasonable or  impracticable  to 
    assess the task after the due date. 
      For more  information  about  academic misconduct,  special  consideration,  extensions,  and 
    assessment  feedback,  please  refer  to  the  document  Your  rights  and  responsibilities  as  a 
    student  in  this Unit  in  the  first  folder next  to  the Unit Guide of  the Resources area  in  the 
    CloudDeakin unit site. 
      Building  evidence  of  your  experiences,  skills  and  knowledge  (Portfolio)  -  Building  a 
    portfolio  that  evidences  your  skills,  knowledge  and  experience  will  provide  you  with  a 
    valuable  tool  to help  you prepare  for  interviews and  to  showcase  to potential employers.  
    There are a number of  tools  that you can use  to build a portfolio.   You are provided with 
    cloud space through OneDrive, or through the Portfolio tool in the Cloud Unit Site, but you 
    can  use  any  storage  repository  system  that  you  like.  Remember  that  a  Portfolio  is  YOUR 
    tool.  You  should  be  able  to  store  your  assessment  work,  reflections,  achievements  and 
    artefacts in YOUR Portfolio. Once you have completed this assessment piece, add it to your 
    personal  Portfolio  to  use  and  showcase  your  learning  later,  when  applying  for  jobs,  or 
    further studies.  Curate your work by adding meaningful tags to your artefacts that describe 
    what the artefact represents. 
    Checklist: 代写 MLC101 – Business Law Case Study Report 
    Before submission, please check whether you have ...  
      Saved the assessment as a word document (.doc or .docx ONLY) 
      Included a word count for the assignment 
      Complied with the referencing rules and bibliography.  
      Checked for any plagiarized material.
 
     
    代写 MLC101 – Business Law Case Study Report