Consideration must be of some value & need not be adequate: analyze the basic legal provisions of consideration in the law of contract.’
Introduction
The mere fact of agreement alone does not make a contract. Both parties to the contract must provide consideration if they wish to sue on the contract. This means that each side must promise to give or do something for the other. (Note: if a contract is made by deed, then consideration is not needed.)
For example, if one party, A (the promisor) promises to mow the lawn of another, B (the promisee), A’s promise will only be enforceable by B as a contract if B has provided consideration. The consideration from B might normally take the form of a payment of money but could consist of some other service to which A might agree. Further, the promise of a money payment or service in the future is just as sufficient a consideration as payment itself or the actual rendering of the service. Thus the promisee has to give something in return for the promise of the promisor in order to convert a bare promise made in his favour into a binding contract.
2. Description:
2.1 About Contract: Section 2(h) of the Indian Contract Act provides that, “An Agreement enforceable by law is a contract”. Therefore in a contract there must be (1) an agreement and (2) the agreement must be enforceable by law.
An agreement comes into existence whenever one or more persons promise to one or others, to do or not to do something, “Every promise and every set of promises, forming the consideration for each other, is an agreement. Some agreements cannot be enforced thought he courts of law, e.g., an agreement to play cards or go to a cinema.
An agreement, which can be enforced through the courts of law, is called contract.
3.1About Consideration:
Consideration as defined is the interest, profit, and benefit accruing to one party involved as a payment for the consideration.
In common law it is a prerequisite that both parties offer some consideration before a contract can be thought of as binding