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CHAPTER 21. Performance and Remedies. Click your mouse anywhere on the screen when you are ready to advance the text within each slide. .
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CHAPTER 21 Performance and Remedies
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Quote of the Day “Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economize it.” Mark Twain, American author
Good Faith • Good faith means honesty in fact. • Between merchants, it also means the use of reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing. • The Code requires good faith in the performance and enforcement of every contract.
Seller’s Obligations (and a Few Rights) • Conforming goods satisfy the contract terms. Non-conforming goods do not. • The seller must tender the goods, which means to make conforming goods, available to the buyer. • Perfect Tender Rule • Under the perfect tender rule, the buyer may reject the goods if they fail in any respect to conform to the contract.
Restrictions on the Perfect Tender Rule • Usage of trade: any practice that members of an industry expect to be part of their dealings. • Course of dealing: previous commercial transactions between the same parties. • Course of performance: the history of dealings between the parties in this one contract. This assumes it is a contract demanding an ongoing relationship.
Cure • When the buyer rejects non-conforming goods, the seller has the right to cure, by delivering conforming goods before the contract deadline. • The seller has the right to cure even after the contract deadline if the seller: • reasonably believed the goods to be conforming, and • promptly notified the buyer of his intent to cure within a reasonable time.
Substantial Impairment • The Code puts a tighter restriction on buyers in the following two cases. A buyer who claims goods are non-conforming must show that the defects substantially impair their value if: • the buyer is revoking acceptance of goods, or • the buyer is rejecting an installment.
Destruction of Goods • If identified goods are totally destroyed before risk passes to the buyer, the contract is void. • If identified goods are partially destroyed, the buyer may choose whether to accept the goods at a reduced price or void the contract.
Commercial Impracticability • A supervening event excuses performance of a contract, if the event was not within the parties’ contemplation when they made the agreement. • Sometimes natural disasters such as tornadoes and earthquakes may relieve a party from performing.
Buyer’s Obligations (and a Few Rights) • The buyer must provide adequate facilities to receive the goods. • Inspection -- The buyer generally has the right to inspect the goods before paying or accepting. • Partial Acceptance -- The buyer may accept some goods and reject others if the goods can be divided into commercial units.
Buyer’s Obligations (and a Few Rights) – (cont’d) • May revoke acceptance only if the nonconformity substantially impairs the value and only if she had a legitimate reason for the initial acceptance. • May reject non-conforming goods by notifying seller within a reasonable time. • May reject a non-conforming installment, only if it substantially impairs the value of that installment and cannot be cured.
Remedies: Assurance • When there are reasonable grounds for insecurity, a party may: • demand written assurance of performance from the other party, and • until he receives it, generally may suspend his own performance.
Remedies: Repudiation • A party repudiates a contract by indicating that it will not perform. • When either party repudiates the contract, the other party may: • for a reasonable time await performance or • resort to any remedy for breach of contract. • In either case, it may suspend its own performance.
Seller’s Remedies • Cancel the contract • Stop or refuse delivery • Identify goods to the contract • If the seller has not yet identified goods to the contract, he may do so as soon as he learns of the breach. • Resell goods • The seller may recover difference between the resale price and contract price, plus incidental damages, minus expenses saved.
Seller’s Remedies (cont’d) • Damages for Non-Acceptance • A seller who does not resell, or who resells unreasonably, may only recover the difference between the contract price and the market value of the goods at the time of delivery. • Action for the Price • A seller may recover the contract price if: • the buyer has accepted the goods, or • the seller’s goods are conforming and he is unable to resell after a reasonable effort.
Buyer’s Remedies • Cancel the contract • Recover money paid • Cover • If the seller breaches, the buyer may “cover” by reasonably obtaining substitute goods. • Buyer may then obtain the difference between the contract price and the cover price, plus incidental and consequential damages, minus expenses saved.
Buyer’s Remedies (cont’d) • Non-Delivery • The difference between the market price at the time the buyer learns of the breach and the contract price, plus incidental and consequential damages minus expenses saved. • Acceptance of Non-Conforming Goods • Buyer may recover damages for the difference between the goods as promised and as delivered, plus incidental and consequential damages.
Buyer’s Remedies (cont’d) • Incidental and Consequential Damages • An injured buyer is generally entitled to incidental and consequential damages. • Specific Performance • Allowed if the contract goods are unique, or the buyer is unable to obtain cover. • Liquidated Damages • Enforceable, but only in an amount that is reasonable in light of the harm.
Damage Limitations and Exclusions • A court generally will not enforce a limitation that leaves the injured party with no remedy. • A court will not enforce an unconscionable exclusion of consequential damages.
“Performance and remedy under the Code reflect contemporary commercial practices but also demand a satisfactory level of sensible, ethical behavior.”