There is little doubt that historically the \u27reasonable foreseeability\u27 criterion in Hadley v. Baxendale was thought of as a fairly general damages limitation exercise whose chief function was to prevent liability for consequential loss getting out of control, and that it was only somewhat later that lawyers got the idea that there should be a fundamental cleavage between tort and contract. The aim of this article has been to show that, despite what has since become modern orthodoxy, the arguments against applying Hadley to non-contractual claims do not stand up. The way should therefore be open to regard Hadley as what it was always intended to be: a general rule applying to all forms of compensation for non-deliberate damage, whatev...
The rules governing the measure of monetary remedies in contract, tort and equity differ largely bet...
It is common knowledge that the fully developed common law affords no means to compel the performanc...
Scholars and courts typically describe and defend American contract law as a system of strict liabil...
There is little doubt that historically the \u27reasonable foreseeability\u27 criterion in Hadley v....
The venerable case of Hadley v. Baxendale serves as the prototype for default rules designed to pena...
There is a type of contract that could go virtually unenforced as a result of the rule of Hadley v. ...
In 1854, the English Exchequer Court delivered the landmark case of Hadley v. Baxendale. That case p...
Liability for consequential losses is not to be entirely open-ended, and some means to limit such l...
One of the most controversial aspects of the assessment of damages for breach of contract is the ext...
One of the most controversial aspects of the assessment of damages for breach of contract is the ext...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
Following the recognition by the House of Lords in AG v Blake of the gain-based remedy of an account...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
This Article was part of a symposium on the rise of civil recourse theory. It contributes to this de...
The rules governing the measure of monetary remedies in contract, tort and equity differ largely bet...
It is common knowledge that the fully developed common law affords no means to compel the performanc...
Scholars and courts typically describe and defend American contract law as a system of strict liabil...
There is little doubt that historically the \u27reasonable foreseeability\u27 criterion in Hadley v....
The venerable case of Hadley v. Baxendale serves as the prototype for default rules designed to pena...
There is a type of contract that could go virtually unenforced as a result of the rule of Hadley v. ...
In 1854, the English Exchequer Court delivered the landmark case of Hadley v. Baxendale. That case p...
Liability for consequential losses is not to be entirely open-ended, and some means to limit such l...
One of the most controversial aspects of the assessment of damages for breach of contract is the ext...
One of the most controversial aspects of the assessment of damages for breach of contract is the ext...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
Following the recognition by the House of Lords in AG v Blake of the gain-based remedy of an account...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
This Article was part of a symposium on the rise of civil recourse theory. It contributes to this de...
The rules governing the measure of monetary remedies in contract, tort and equity differ largely bet...
It is common knowledge that the fully developed common law affords no means to compel the performanc...
Scholars and courts typically describe and defend American contract law as a system of strict liabil...