Contract damages aim to leave the injured party in as good a position as if the contract had been fulfilled. But discharged laborers often obtain a much better result due to the lack of a reduction for their excused work effort on breach. After first exposing the problematic ramifications of this unjustified deviation, this Article then provides two workable corrections
The theory of our law in regard to damages for breach of contract has been to give the innocent part...
This paper enters the dispute over the proper interpretation of the expectation measure of damages i...
This Paper examines contract remedies, especially damage awards that are punitive or restitutionary,...
Contract damages aim to leave the injured party in as good a position as if the contract had been fu...
An old and cardinal rule of contract law requires that expectancy damages for breach of contract put...
The majority of American jurisdictions do not allow punitive damages for breach of contract unless t...
This article begins with a brief discussion of restitution as a remedy for breach of contract under ...
This Article is devoted primarily to describing and analyzing the conceptual framework within which ...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
Modern law often rests on the assumption that a uniform cost-benefit formula is the proper way to de...
Legal rights may erode as a result of past, uncontested, breach. In light of ongoing violations, th...
Those of us who study contracts tend to forget that most people keep the promises they make. Contrac...
What is the role of contract law in remedying breach? The question of the appropriate legal remedy, ...
A promisor is strictly liable for breaching a contract, according to the standard account. However, ...
The familiar contract doctrines of discharge for mutual mistake (as epitomized by a case like Sher...
The theory of our law in regard to damages for breach of contract has been to give the innocent part...
This paper enters the dispute over the proper interpretation of the expectation measure of damages i...
This Paper examines contract remedies, especially damage awards that are punitive or restitutionary,...
Contract damages aim to leave the injured party in as good a position as if the contract had been fu...
An old and cardinal rule of contract law requires that expectancy damages for breach of contract put...
The majority of American jurisdictions do not allow punitive damages for breach of contract unless t...
This article begins with a brief discussion of restitution as a remedy for breach of contract under ...
This Article is devoted primarily to describing and analyzing the conceptual framework within which ...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
Modern law often rests on the assumption that a uniform cost-benefit formula is the proper way to de...
Legal rights may erode as a result of past, uncontested, breach. In light of ongoing violations, th...
Those of us who study contracts tend to forget that most people keep the promises they make. Contrac...
What is the role of contract law in remedying breach? The question of the appropriate legal remedy, ...
A promisor is strictly liable for breaching a contract, according to the standard account. However, ...
The familiar contract doctrines of discharge for mutual mistake (as epitomized by a case like Sher...
The theory of our law in regard to damages for breach of contract has been to give the innocent part...
This paper enters the dispute over the proper interpretation of the expectation measure of damages i...
This Paper examines contract remedies, especially damage awards that are punitive or restitutionary,...