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Performance

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Title: Performance


1
CHAPTER 17
Performance and Discharge
2
Quote of the Day
  • If you cant give me your word of honor, will
    you give me your promise?
  • Samuel Goldwyn,
  • Hollywood producer

3
Discharge
  • A party is discharged when she has no more duties
    under a contract.
  • Most contracts are discharged by full
    performance.
  • Sometimes the parties discharge a contract by
    agreement.
  • Rescind means that they terminate it by mutual
    agreement.

4
Conditions
  • A condition is an event that must occur before a
    party becomes obligated under a contract.
  • How Conditions are Created
  • Express Conditions -- No special language is
    necessary to create the condition, but it must be
    stated clearly somehow.
  • Implied Conditions The condition is not stated,
    but is clear from the agreement.

5
Types of Conditions
  • Condition Precedent
  • Must occur before a duty arises.
  • Condition Subsequent
  • Must occur after the particular duty arises.
  • Concurrent Conditions
  • Certain things must occur simultaneously.

6
Performance
  • Strict Performance
  • Performance that is exactly what promised is
    usually not expected and failure to do so does
    not cause for discharge.
  • Substantial Performance
  • A party that substantially performs its
    obligations will receive the full contract price,
    minus the value of any defects.
  • A party that fails to perform substantially
    receives nothing on the contract and will only
    recover the value of the work, if any.

7
Personal Satisfaction Contracts
  • A personal satisfaction contract is one which the
    promisee makes a personal, subjective evaluation
    of the promisors performance.
  • A court uses a subjective standard only if
    assessing the work involves feelings, taste, or
    judgment and the contract explicitly demands
    personal satisfaction.
  • In all other cases, a court applies an objective
    standard to the decision.

8
Good Faith
  • The Restatement (Second) of Contracts 205
    states Every contract imposes upon each party a
    duty of good faith and fair dealings in its
    performance and its enforcement.

9
Time of the Essence Clauses
  • A time of the essence clause will generally make
    contract dates strictly enforceable.
  • Merely including a date for performance does not
    make time of the essence.

10
Breach
  • Material Breach
  • Generally courts will discharge only if a party
    committed a material breach.
  • Anticipatory Breach
  • Anticipatory breach is committed by one party
    making it unmistakably clear that he will not
    honor the contract.
  • Statute of Limitations
  • Will limit the time within which the injured
    party may file suit.

11
Impossibility
  • True Impossibility
  • Something has happened making it utterly
    impossible to fulfill the promise.
  • Commercial Impracticability
  • Some event has occurred that neither party
    anticipated, making the contract extra-ordinarily
    difficult and unfair to one party.
  • Frustration of Purpose
  • Some event has occurred that neither party
    anticipated and the contract now has no value for
    one party.

12
Good faith and reasonable conduct will prevent
many contract disputes.
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