Breach of contract
is a legal concept in which a binding
agreement or bargained-for exchange is not
honored by one or more of the parties to the
contract by non-performance or interference
with the other party's performance.
Minor Breaches
A minor
breach, a partial breach or an immaterial
breach, occurs when the non-breaching party
is unentitled to an order for performance of
its obligations, but only to collect the
actual amount of their damages. For example,
suppose a homeowner hires a contractor to
install new plumbing and insists that the
pipes, which will ultimately be sealed
behind the walls, be red. The contractor
instead uses blue pipes that function just
as well. Although the contractor breached
the literal terms of the contract, the
homeowner can only recover the amount of his
damages. Since no damages were inflicted,
the homeowner receives nothing.
Material Breach
A
material breach is any failure to
perform that permits the other party to the
contract to either compel performance, or
collect damages because of the breach. If
the contractor in the above example had been
instructed to use copper pipes, and instead
used iron pipes which would not last as long
as the copper pipes would have, the
homeowner can recover the cost of actually
correcting the breach - taking out the iron
pipes and replacing them with copper pipes.
Fundamental Breach
A
fundamental breach (or repudiatory
breach) is a breach so fundamental that
it permits the aggrieved party to terminate
performance of the contract, in addition to
entitling that party to sue for damages.
Anticipatory Breach
A
breach by anticipatory repudiation (or
simply anticipatory breach) is an
unequivocal indication that the party will
not perform when performance is due, or a
situation in which future non-performance is
inevitable. An anticipatory breach gives the
non-breaching party the option to treat such
a breach as immediate, and, if repudiatory,
to terminate the contract and sue for
damages (without waiting for the breach to
actually take place).
Limits on Remedies and Damages
Typically, the judicial remedy for breach of
contract is monetary damages. See damages.
Where the failure to perform cannot be
adequately redressed by money damage, the
court may enter an equity decree awarding an
injunction or specific performance.
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