A party dissatisfied with the contractual performance of a counterparty is typically able to pursue a variety of legal recourses. Within this apparent variety lurk two fundamental alternatives. The aggrieved party may (i) “affirm” the contract and seek money damages or specific performance; or (ii) “disaffirm” the contract with the remedy of rescission and restitution. This simple dichotomy of contract remedies applies broadly in both common law and civil law practice. We show here that this remedial regime allows parties to write simple contracts that induce first-best cooperative investments
The Law and economics movement has paid a lot of attention to carefully analyzing various doctrines ...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
It is commonly held that if getting a contractual remedy was costless and fully compensatory, rescis...
A party dissatisfied with the contractual performance of a counterparty is typically able to pursue ...
When investments are non-verifiable, inducing cooperative investments with simple contracts may not ...
In several contract situations, parties exchange promises of future performance, creating reciprocal...
Easy availability of rescission followed by restitution has, for centuries, unsettled legal authorit...
We show that parties in bilateral trade can rely on the default common law breach remedy of ‘expecta...
Contracts that contemplate alternative possible modes of performance, frequently referred to as alte...
Contract law is usually perceived as a strict liability system. When a promisor fails to perform he ...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
It is hornbook law that restitution is sometimes available as an alternative remedy to a party who h...
It is commonly held that if getting a contractual remedy was costless and fully compensatory, rescis...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
The Law and economics movement has paid a lot of attention to carefully analyzing various doctrines ...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
It is commonly held that if getting a contractual remedy was costless and fully compensatory, rescis...
A party dissatisfied with the contractual performance of a counterparty is typically able to pursue ...
When investments are non-verifiable, inducing cooperative investments with simple contracts may not ...
In several contract situations, parties exchange promises of future performance, creating reciprocal...
Easy availability of rescission followed by restitution has, for centuries, unsettled legal authorit...
We show that parties in bilateral trade can rely on the default common law breach remedy of ‘expecta...
Contracts that contemplate alternative possible modes of performance, frequently referred to as alte...
Contract law is usually perceived as a strict liability system. When a promisor fails to perform he ...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
It is hornbook law that restitution is sometimes available as an alternative remedy to a party who h...
It is commonly held that if getting a contractual remedy was costless and fully compensatory, rescis...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
The Law and economics movement has paid a lot of attention to carefully analyzing various doctrines ...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
It is commonly held that if getting a contractual remedy was costless and fully compensatory, rescis...