Courts will not enforce liquidated damage clauses when a stipulated sum exceeds (i) the harm that the promisee could reasonably expect to suffer from breach or (ii) the actual harm that breach turned out to cause. Courts traditionally have not awarded punitive damages for a breach of contract unless the conduct constituting the breach is also a tort for which punitive damages are recoverable. Courts also will not grant specific performance if damages would be adequate to protect the expectation interest of the injured party, nor will courts enforce contracts that accord promisees a right to specific relief
I. Introduction . . . . . 840 II. The Principal Institutions in a Modern Market Economy in Which Con...
Author's draft submitted to SSRN working papers series; last revised October 19, 2006The thrust of t...
Using a series of surveys and experiments, we find that ordinary people think that courts will give ...
Courts will not enforce liquidated damage clauses when a stipulated sum exceeds (i) the harm that th...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
We defend contract law’s preference for the expectation remedy against economic, doctrinal, and mora...
Contract law is generally understood to require no more of a person who breaches a contract than to ...
Contract law is generally understood to require no more of a person who breaches a contract than to ...
The majority of American jurisdictions do not allow punitive damages for breach of contract unless t...
What is the role of contract law in remedying breach? The question of the appropriate legal remedy, ...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
For more than five centuries, strict judicial scrutiny has been applied to contractual provisions wh...
This section discusses undercompensatory damages rules in contract law. These are rules that reduce ...
The basic remedy for breach of a bargain contract is expectation damages, which puts the injured par...
I. Introduction . . . . . 840 II. The Principal Institutions in a Modern Market Economy in Which Con...
Author's draft submitted to SSRN working papers series; last revised October 19, 2006The thrust of t...
Using a series of surveys and experiments, we find that ordinary people think that courts will give ...
Courts will not enforce liquidated damage clauses when a stipulated sum exceeds (i) the harm that th...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
We defend contract law’s preference for the expectation remedy against economic, doctrinal, and mora...
Contract law is generally understood to require no more of a person who breaches a contract than to ...
Contract law is generally understood to require no more of a person who breaches a contract than to ...
The majority of American jurisdictions do not allow punitive damages for breach of contract unless t...
What is the role of contract law in remedying breach? The question of the appropriate legal remedy, ...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
For more than five centuries, strict judicial scrutiny has been applied to contractual provisions wh...
This section discusses undercompensatory damages rules in contract law. These are rules that reduce ...
The basic remedy for breach of a bargain contract is expectation damages, which puts the injured par...
I. Introduction . . . . . 840 II. The Principal Institutions in a Modern Market Economy in Which Con...
Author's draft submitted to SSRN working papers series; last revised October 19, 2006The thrust of t...
Using a series of surveys and experiments, we find that ordinary people think that courts will give ...