Willful breach doctrine should be a major embarrassment to contract law. If the default remedy for breach is expectation damages designed to put the injured promisee in the position she would have been in if the contract had been performed, then the promisor\u27s behavior-the reason for the breach-looks to be irrelevant in assessing damages. And yet the cases are full of references to willful breaches, which seem often to be treated more harshly than ordinary ones based on the promisor\u27s bad/willful conduct. Our explanation is that willful breaches are best understood as those that should be prevented or deterred because the parties have implicitly agreed that the promisor would not breach in those circumstances. When willfulness, so u...
Most people think that breaking a promise is immoral, and that a breach of contract is a kind of bro...
We defend contract law’s preference for the expectation remedy against economic, doctrinal, and mora...
The modern argument that the law of obligations should be recast in restitutionary terms appears to ...
Willful breach doctrine should be a major embarrassment to contract law. If the default remedy for b...
Willful breach doctrine should be a major embarrassment to contract law. If the default remedy for b...
Should willful breach be sanctioned more severely than inadvertent breach? Strikingly, there is shar...
The existing literature on willful breach has not been able to define what should count as willful....
When, in the absence of traditional contract formalities, a promise is enforced because the promisee...
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...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
Most people think that breaking a promise is immoral, and that a breach of contract is a kind of bro...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
Breach of contract may occur by the fault of party in breach. There is a variety of degrees in contr...
Most people think that breaking a promise is immoral, and that a breach of contract is a kind of bro...
We defend contract law’s preference for the expectation remedy against economic, doctrinal, and mora...
The modern argument that the law of obligations should be recast in restitutionary terms appears to ...
Willful breach doctrine should be a major embarrassment to contract law. If the default remedy for b...
Willful breach doctrine should be a major embarrassment to contract law. If the default remedy for b...
Should willful breach be sanctioned more severely than inadvertent breach? Strikingly, there is shar...
The existing literature on willful breach has not been able to define what should count as willful....
When, in the absence of traditional contract formalities, a promise is enforced because the promisee...
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...
Contract remedies have long sought to protect the gains that parties contract to realize. Although t...
Most people think that breaking a promise is immoral, and that a breach of contract is a kind of bro...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
Breach of contract may occur by the fault of party in breach. There is a variety of degrees in contr...
Most people think that breaking a promise is immoral, and that a breach of contract is a kind of bro...
We defend contract law’s preference for the expectation remedy against economic, doctrinal, and mora...
The modern argument that the law of obligations should be recast in restitutionary terms appears to ...