(BLUE) Contract Remedies Flashcards
What are the 3 main types of remedy in contract law?
-Legal remedies (repudiation and damages)
-Equitable remedies (injunctions and specific performance)
-Specific remedies (under the CRA 2015 and Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943)
What is meant by repudiation?
Ending a contract/ setting it aside - may result in lawful refusal of future performance, rejecting any goods and a refund of money paid. Actual or anticipatory breach of conditions leads to repudiation, and serious (actual or anticipatory) breaches of innominate terms could lead to repudiation too.
What are the 2 types of damages?
-Nominal damages
-Compensatory damages
What are nominal damages?
Nominal damages occur when nothing has been lost as a result of the breach, so the damages are simply there to recognise that there was in fact a breach. Due to there being no loss, these damages are usually a very small amount.
What is the purpose of compensatory damages?
Robinson v Harman- to put the claimant in the same financial position they would have been had the contract been properly performed.
What losses can be compensated?
To get compensatory damages for loss, the loss must not be too remote from the breach.
What are the 2 types of losses?
-Normal losses that come naturally from the breach
-Special losses caused by/based on particular circumstances
What is the remoteness test for each type of loss?
Hadley v Baxendale
-Normal losses are not too remote if they are reasonably foreseeable
-Special losses are not too remote if the defendant knew of the particular circumstances and the loss they could cause
How were the remoteness tests applied to Victoria Laundry v Newman?
The money from the existing contracts were normal losses and thus recoverable as it was reasonably foreseeable that the laundry’s ordinary business couldn’t continue without the boiler. The government contract was a special loss because it wasn’t part of their everyday business and wasn’t recoverable because the defendant didn’t know of this contract.
What is quantum of damages?
Calculating the amount of compensatory damages owed. There are 2 methods to do this:
-Expectation loss
-Reliance loss
What is expectation loss?
This calculates the amount/value expected to be gained if the contract was performed properly. There are 2 main ways this can be measured. Either one party hasn’t performed at all so the expectation loss will be the cost of obtaining the good or service that should have been supplied and possibly any profit expected. Or one party performs the contract but does so defectively. The expectation loss here is either the cost of restoring the goods to the expected quality or the gap in price between the goods contracted for and those actually received.
What is the case where C could claim compensatory damages for expectation loss?
Thompson v Robinson- C could sue for the loss of profit they would have made on the car as he has expected to make that profit but had now lost that profit. (The car was not high in demand).
What is the case where C could only claim nominal damages?
Charter v Sullivan- C could not recover lost profit on the car here because it would have been easy to get the same profit from someone else (due to the car being in high demand). Therefore he would not actually lose profit as a result of this breach, so did not need to recover this.
What is reliance loss?
Reliance loss is used when it is very hard to figure out what value could be expected if the contract was complete. Instead, reliance loss looks at what value has been lost as a result of starting the contract (because they relied on the contract continuing).
Which case is an example of reliance loss?
Anglia TV v Reed- it would be hard to tell how much profit the film would make before it was finished – it could have been very successful or not very successful. Instead, A got damages based on the amount they had already spent on the film before the contract ended.