Object of a contract/legal relationship (law)

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What’s the object of a contract of Employment (more specifically Cleaning Services in a restaurant)?

I’m guessing it’s basically the purpose that the contract wants to impose, but I’m not sure… Could I write “the object of this contract is to give the employee the duty to perform cleaning services in this restaurant, while also having the right to receive “x” amount of wage monthly for completing these duties”? Is this correct?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

An employment contract is a contract in which one person offers a fixed service to someone else and in return receives monthly wages, benefits and other rewards as applicable under the laws of the jurisdiction the contract falls under.

You wouldn’t say that someone has a right to earn wages, but that the employer will pay the employee X dollars every calendar month, or something to that matter. This is a business transaction: I do something for you, you do something for me.

If you’re actually writing a contract of employment, get a lawyer to help you or find sample contracts for the area you’re currently residing in. In the case of an ambiguous contract generally the party that didn’t write the contract is given the benefit of doubt.