When a Contract Loses Its Standing
So let me get this straight. Someone produced a document for my bank of insurance—a document that, at this point, is not upstanding. The bank accepted it without looking closely, without doing the due diligence that should have been second nature.
And now? The bank was duped. The oversight wasn’t mine. It wasn’t on my shoulders. It was theirs.
So doesn’t that mean the contract with this individual is null and void? invalid, as in it cannot stand, it cannot hold, it cannot bind.
Let that sink in.
Contracts are built on trust, on legitimacy, on the assumption that both parties are entering into an agreement with clean hands. When one side presents a fraudulent or defective document, and the other side fails to catch it, the foundation crumbles. What remains is not a contract—it’s a hollow shell.
This isn’t just about paperwork. It’s about accountability. It’s about institutions that should know better, that should protect the people they serve, and that should never allow deception to slide through unchecked.
Because when the paper is rotten, the promise is broken. And when the promise is broken, the contract is gone.