Chapter 18 Flashcards

1
Q

Discharge

A

The termination of an obligation
- when the parties have fully performed their contractual obligations or when the law releases the parties from performance

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2
Q

Performance

A

The fulfillment of ones duties arising under a contract with another; the normal way of discharging ones contractual obligations

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3
Q

Condition

A

A possible future event, the occurrence or nonoccurence of which will trigger the performance of a legal obligation or terminate an existing obligation under a contract

  • precedent
  • subsequent
  • concurrent
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4
Q

Condition precedent

A

A condition in a contract that must be met before a party’s promise becomes absolute

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5
Q

Conditions subsequent

A

A condition in a contract that operates to terminate a party’s absolute promise to perform

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6
Q

Concurrent conditions

A

Conditions in a contract that must occur or be performed at the same time; they are mutually dependent. No obligations arise until these conditions are simultaneously performed

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7
Q

Tender

A

An unconditional offer to perform an obligation by a person who is ready, willing, and able to do so

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8
Q

Complete performance

A

When a party performs exactly as agreed

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9
Q

Substantial performance

A

A party who in good faith performs substantially all the terms of a contract can enforce the contract against the other party.

  1. Good faith
  2. Performance can not vary from what was promised in the contract
  3. The performance must create substantially the same benefits as those performed in the contract
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10
Q

Breach of contract

A

The failure without legal excuse of a promisor to perform the obligations of a contract

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11
Q

Anticipatory repudiation

A

An assertion or action by a party indicating that he or she will not perform an obligation that the party is contractually obligated to perform at a future time
- treated as a material breach of the contract

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12
Q

If no time for performance is stated in the contract what is implied

A

A reasonable time

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13
Q

mutual rescission

A

An agreement between the parties to cancel their contract releasing the parties from further obligations.

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14
Q

Novation

A

The substitution by agreement of a new contract for an old one, with the rights under the old one being terminated. Typically there is a substitution of a new person who is responsible for the contract and the removal of an original party’s rights and duties under the contract

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15
Q

Requirements of a novation

A
  1. A previous valid obligation
  2. An agreement by all parties to a new contract
  3. The extinguishing of the old obligation
  4. A new contract that is valid
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16
Q

Discharge in bankruptcy

A

The release of a debtor from all dents that are provable, except those specifically excepted from discharge by statute

17
Q

Impossibility of performance

A

A doctrine under which a party to a contract is relieved of his or her duty to perform when performance becomes impossible or totally impracticable (through no fault of either party)

18
Q

When performance is impossible

A
  1. When one of the parties to a personal contract dies or becomes incapacitated prior to performance
  2. When the specific subject matter of the contract is destroyed
  3. When a change in law renders performance illegal
19
Q

Commercial impracticability

A

A doctrine under which a seller may be excused from performing a contract when

  1. A contingency occurs
  2. The contingency’s occurrence makes performance impracticable
  3. The nonoccurence of the contingency was a basic assumption on which the contract was made
20
Q

Frustration of purpose

A

A court created doctrine under which a party to a contract will be relieved of his or her duty to perform when the objective purpose for performance no longer exists (due to reasons behind that party’s control)