Eduacademy

Mnemonics for Business Law — Commerce Quick Recap | EduAcademy
Exam tips 11th & 12th BCom

Mnemonics for Business Law — Commerce Quick Recap

📅 31 May 2026 ⏱ 8 min read ✍️ EduAcademy Team
5 Original mnemonics — one per Act
5+ Acts covered — from Contract Act to NI Act
10 min Time to memorise all five mnemonics

Business Law has five major Acts to memorise — and they all start to blur together the night before the exam. Furthermore, each Act carries multiple elements, rights, and characteristics that examiners specifically check for, one by one.

This guide solves that problem with five original mnemonics — one for each major Act. Instead of re-reading your textbook for the third time, you can use these memory hooks to recall every key point in under 10 minutes.

Additionally, each mnemonic comes with an exam usage tip so you know exactly how to open your answer with it — and pick up every available mark.

"Use the mnemonic as the opening line of your answer — it signals immediately to the examiner that you know the full list."

Indian Contract Act 1872 — OCCAL-FC

The Indian Contract Act is the most-examined Business Law topic at 11th, 12th, and BCom level. Consequently, a clear mnemonic for its essentials is the single most useful memory tool you can carry into any Commerce exam.

Section 10 of the Indian Contract Act 1872 lists the essential elements of a valid contract. However, most students either forget one or two elements mid-answer, or list them without explanation. Moreover, in a 6-mark or 8-mark question, each element carries its own mark — so missing even one costs you directly.

OCCAL-FC
Indian Contract Act 1872
Elements of a valid contract — Section 10
📝 6–8 marks · 11th, 12th & BCom
O
Offer
A definite proposal made by one party to another — must be clear, communicated, and intentional
C
Consideration
Something of value exchanged between parties — "no consideration, no contract" is the rule
C
Competent parties
Both parties must be of legal age (18+), of sound mind, and not disqualified by law
A
Acceptance
Unconditional agreement to the offer — must be communicated clearly to the offeror
L
Lawful object
The purpose of the contract must be legal — contracts for illegal activities are void
F
Free consent
Consent must be free from coercion, undue influence, fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake
C
Certainty of terms
The terms of the contract must be clear and definite — vague agreements cannot be enforced
💡 How to use OCCAL-FC in your answer

Open with: "A valid contract under Section 10 requires OCCAL-FC: an Offer, Consideration, Competent parties, Acceptance, Lawful object, Free consent, and Certainty of terms." Then dedicate one sentence to each element. For a 6-mark question, this structure gives you 7 points — one mark to spare.

Why Free consent deserves extra attention

Free consent is the element most frequently tested as a standalone question at the BCom level. Additionally, examiners often ask students to list the five factors that vitiate free consent — coercion, undue influence, fraud, misrepresentation, and mistake.

Therefore, once you have OCCAL-FC memorised, also memorise the five factors under F: CUMFM — Coercion, Undue influence, Misrepresentation, Fraud, Mistake. Together, these two mnemonics cover the entire contract law section of most BCom Business Law papers.

Sale of Goods Act 1930 — TEMPS

The Sale of Goods Act governs contracts for the sale of movable goods in India. Furthermore, it is a common source of short-answer questions (2–4 marks) in both 12th standard and BCom Business Law papers.

TEMPS covers the five key concepts that appear most frequently in exam questions on this Act. Additionally, the word "TEMPS" itself is easy to remember — think of a market stall in any weather, making deals under any conditions.

TEMPS
Sale of Goods Act 1930
Key essentials of a contract of sale
📝 2–6 marks · 12th & BCom
T
Transfer of property
Ownership must transfer from seller to buyer — this distinguishes a sale from a hire-purchase or bailment
E
Existing or future goods
Goods can be existing (already owned by seller) or future (to be produced) — both are valid subjects of sale
M
Merchantable quality
Goods must be fit for the purpose they are ordinarily used for — implied condition in every sale
P
Price (money consideration)
The consideration in a contract of sale must be money (price) — exchange of goods for goods is barter, not sale
S
Seller's implied warranty
The seller implies that the buyer will enjoy quiet possession and that goods are free from any encumbrances
💡 When TEMPS appears in exams

"Define the essentials of a contract of sale" and "Distinguish between a sale and an agreement to sell" are the two most common questions from this Act. TEMPS covers the foundation concepts for both — use it as your checklist before writing any answer on this Act.

Consumer Protection Act 2019 — RISHSEC

The Consumer Protection Act 2019 replaced the older 1986 Act and added two significant updates: e-commerce liability and the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA). Consequently, exam questions now specifically ask about these new provisions.

However, the six consumer rights remain the most-tested element — and RISHSEC maps directly to all six, with a seventh letter for a bonus mark-winning detail.

RISHSEC
Consumer Protection Act 2019
The six consumer rights + one bonus
📝 6 marks · 11th, 12th & BCom
R
Right to Safety
Protection against goods and services that are hazardous to life and property
I
Right to Information
Access to accurate information about quality, quantity, price, and standards of goods
S
Right to Select (Choose)
Access to a variety of goods at competitive prices — freedom from monopolistic practices
H
Right to be Heard
Consumer interests must be given due consideration in appropriate forums and proceedings
S
Right to Seek Redress
Protection against unfair trade practices and right to fair settlement of genuine grievances
E
Right to Consumer Education
Right to acquire knowledge and skills to be an informed consumer throughout one's life
C
Consumer environment (bonus)
Right to a healthy, clean, and sustainable environment — added emphasis in the 2019 Act
💡 BCom bonus tip — mention CCPA

Add one final line to any Consumer Protection answer: "The Consumer Protection Act 2019 also established the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) — a new regulatory body with powers to take suo motu action against unfair trade practices." This detail distinguishes a BCom answer from a 12th standard answer and typically earns the extra half or full mark.

Companies Act 2013 — SLAPMO

Characteristics of a company is a standard BCom Business Law question — typically 8 marks and appearing in almost every university paper. Furthermore, these characteristics also form the basis of compare-and-contrast questions between a company and a partnership or sole proprietorship.

SLAPMO covers the six core characteristics that must appear in any answer about a company under the Companies Act 2013. Additionally, each letter in SLAPMO maps to a point that clearly distinguishes a company from other business structures.

SLAPMO
Companies Act 2013
Six characteristics of a company
📝 8 marks · BCom Business Law
S
Separate legal entity
A company is distinct from its members — it can own property, sue, and be sued in its own name (Salomon v Salomon is the landmark case)
L
Limited liability
Members' liability is limited to the unpaid amount on their shares — personal assets are protected beyond that amount
A
Artificial person
A company exists only in the eyes of the law — it has rights and duties but no physical form
P
Perpetual succession
A company continues to exist regardless of changes in membership — the death or exit of a shareholder does not dissolve it
M
Membership (share transferability)
Shares of a public company are freely transferable — members can exit without dissolving the company
O
Own seal (common seal)
A company has its own official seal used for executing documents — optional under the 2015 Companies Amendment Act but still exam-relevant
💡 How to use SLAPMO in an 8-mark answer

Dedicate one short paragraph (3–4 lines) to each SLAPMO characteristic. That gives you 6 points at roughly 1.5 marks each — full marks covered with one point to spare. For BCom answers, briefly contrast each point with the equivalent in a partnership: for example, "In contrast to a partnership, a company's members enjoy limited liability — personal assets cannot be seized to settle company debts."

Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 — PUTI

The Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 defines and governs three types of negotiable instruments: promissory notes, bills of exchange, and cheques. Furthermore, it is tested in BCom sem 3 and sem 5 papers, as well as in 12th standard Business Studies.

PUTI covers the four essential features that every negotiable instrument must possess. Consequently, it is the fastest answer to any question that begins with "Define a negotiable instrument" or "State the essentials of a negotiable instrument."

PUTI
Negotiable Instruments Act 1881
Four essentials of a negotiable instrument
📝 4–6 marks · BCom sem 3 & sem 5
P
Payable to order or bearer
The instrument must be payable either to a specific person ("pay to X or order") or to whoever holds it ("pay bearer")
U
Unconditional promise or order
The promise or order to pay must be absolute — any condition attached destroys negotiability
T
Transferable by delivery or endorsement
The instrument must pass freely from person to person — this is the defining feature of negotiability
I
In writing and signed
Every negotiable instrument must be in writing and signed by the maker or drawer — oral instruments have no legal standing
💡 Bonus — three types in one line each

Promissory note: "I promise to pay X the sum of ₹___" — signed by maker. Bill of exchange: "Pay X or order the sum of ₹___" — signed by drawer, accepted by drawee. Cheque: A bill of exchange drawn on a bank, always payable on demand. Mentioning all three types with one line each adds 3 marks to any NI Act answer.

All 5 mnemonics — quick reference
ActMnemonicMarks
Indian Contract Act 1872
OCCAL-FC
Offer · Consideration · Competent · Acceptance · Lawful · Free consent · Certainty
6–8 marks
Sale of Goods Act 1930
TEMPS
Transfer · Existing goods · Merchantable quality · Price · Seller's warranty
2–6 marks
Consumer Protection Act 2019
RISHSEC
Safety · Information · Select · Heard · Seek redress · Education · Consumer environment
6 marks
Companies Act 2013
SLAPMO
Separate entity · Limited liability · Artificial · Perpetual · Membership · Own seal
8 marks
Negotiable Instruments Act 1881
PUTI
Payable · Unconditional · Transferable · In writing
4–6 marks

How to Use Mnemonics Effectively

Mnemonics are only as useful as the effort you put into cementing them before the exam. Additionally, simply reading them once is not enough — active recall is what makes them stick under pressure.

Here are three techniques that make the difference between recognising a mnemonic and reliably recalling it in the exam hall:

1
Write each mnemonic 5 times by hand the night before the exam. Muscle memory reinforces recall under pressure in ways that reading alone cannot. Furthermore, handwriting forces you to slow down and visualise each letter — which creates a stronger memory trace than typing or highlighting.
2
Test yourself with active recall — cover the expansion column and write the full form from the acronym alone. This technique is proven to be twice as effective as re-reading notes. Additionally, do this test 24 hours after your first reading, not immediately — the gap forces your brain to retrieve the information, which is what consolidates it.
3
Open your exam answer with the mnemonic itself. For example: "A valid contract requires OCCAL-FC: an Offer, backed by Consideration..." This signals to the examiner immediately that you know the full list — and it gives your answer a clear structure from the first line. Consequently, even if your explanation of one element is thin, the examiner can see you identified it correctly.

Here is your final revision checklist — one tick per mnemonic:

  • OCCAL-FC — 7 elements of a valid contract under Indian Contract Act 1872
  • TEMPS — 5 key essentials of a contract of sale under the Sale of Goods Act 1930
  • RISHSEC — 6 consumer rights + CCPA bonus under Consumer Protection Act 2019
  • SLAPMO — 6 characteristics of a company under Companies Act 2013
  • PUTI — 4 essentials of a negotiable instrument + 3 types one line each

Most importantly, Business Law questions reward completeness above all else. Therefore, a student who lists all seven elements of OCCAL-FC with one sentence each will almost always outscore a student who writes three paragraphs about two elements.

Structure beats length — and mnemonics give you the structure.

Get all 5 mnemonics on one printable page

EduAcademy's free Business Law revision sheet puts all five mnemonics — OCCAL-FC, TEMPS, RISHSEC, SLAPMO, and PUTI — on a single printable page, formatted for last-minute exam revision. Download it, print it, stick it on your wall.

Download Free Revision Sheet →