1 / 35

Chapter 14: Performance and Breach of Sales and Lease Contracts

Chapter 14: Performance and Breach of Sales and Lease Contracts. Learning Objectives. What are the respective obligations of the parties under a contract for sale or lease of goods? What is the perfect tender rule?

axel
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 14: Performance and Breach of Sales and Lease Contracts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 14: Performance andBreach of Sales and Lease Contracts

  2. Learning Objectives • What are the respective obligations of the parties under a contract for sale or lease of goods? • What is the perfect tender rule? • What options are available to the nonbreaching party when the other party to a sales or lease contract repudiates the contract prior to the time for performance?

  3. Learning Objectives • What remedies are available to a seller or lessor when the buyer or lessee breaches the contract? • In contracts subject to the UCC, are parties free to limit the remedies available to the non-breaching party on a breach of contract? If so, in what ways?

  4. Performance Obligations • General Principles: • Seller must transfer and deliver conforming goods. • Buyer must accept and pay for conforming goods. • In the absence of an agreement between seller and buyer, UCC Article 2 controls as set out below. 

  5. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Tender of Delivery: occurs when seller delivers conforming goods to buyer. • Requires reasonable notice. • Reasonable hour and manner. • Generally, all goods in one installment (unless agreed upon by parties).

  6. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Place of Delivery. • Parties can agree goods tendered at a particular destination for buyer to take possession. • If the contract does not specify, then it is the seller’s place of business (or the location of the goods.) 

  7. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Delivery via Carrier. • Shipment Contracts. • Shipment: Seller must put conforming goods in carrier’s hands, notify Buyer shipment has been made and provide relevant documents. • Destination: Seller agrees to deliver goods at a particular destination. 

  8. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Delivery via Carrier. • Destination Contracts. • Seller agrees to deliver conforming contracts to the buyer at a particular destination, along with necessary documentation.

  9. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Perfect Tender Rule. • If goods, or tender of delivery, fail in any respect to conform to the contract, the Buyer has the right to: • Accept the goods; • Reject the entire shipment; or • Accept part and reject part.

  10. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Exceptions to Perfect Tender. • Agreement of the Parties: agree that some defective goods will be acceptable. • Cure: seller has right to repair or replace defective goods within the time of contract performance. Substantially restricts right of rejection; buyers must act in good faith and give specific reasons for refusing acceptance.

  11. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Exceptions to Perfect Tender. • Substitution of Carriers. If a carrier becomes impracticable or unavailable through no fault of either party, a commercially reasonable substitute is acceptable. • Installment Contracts. 

  12. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Exceptions to Perfect Tender. • Commercial Impracticability. • If unforeseeable event occurs, the perfect tender rule no longer applies. • Seller must notify the buyer as soon as practicable the shipment is delayed or undeliverable. 

  13. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Exceptions to Perfect Tender. • Commercial Impracticability. • CASE 14.1 Maple Farms, Inc. v. City School District of Elmira (1974). Would you consider a 23% price increase a commercial impracticability? 

  14. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Exceptions to Perfect Tender. • Destruction of Identified Goods. • If no fault of either party and it occurs, • Before risk passes to Buyer then, • Both Seller and Buyer are excused from performance.

  15. Obligations of the Seller or Lessor • Exceptions to Perfect Tender. • Assurance and Cooperation. • One party has “reasonable grounds” to believe other party will not perform, she can ask for written assurance, or ‘suspend’ performance or delivery. • Failure to respond may constitute a repudiation of the contract.

  16. Obligations of the Buyer or Lessee • Payment: make payment at the time and place the Buyer receives the goods. • Credit has to be prearranged. • Pay with cash, credit card, check.

  17. Obligations of the Buyer or Lessee • Right of Inspection. • Buyer has absolute right to inspection before payment, unless C.O.D. • CASE 14.2 Romero v. Scoggin-Dickey Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. (2010). Is the right to inspect good policy?

  18. Obligations of the Buyer or Lessee • Acceptance. • Buyer can accept goods: • By words or conduct. • If Buyer had reasonable amount of time and failed to reject. • Buyer performs an act which indicates he thinks he is the owner. 

  19. Obligations of the Buyer or Lessee • Acceptance. • Partial Acceptance. • If some of the goods do not conform to the contract, and seller has failed to cure, buyer can make a partial acceptance. • But buyer cannot accept less a single commercial unit.

  20. Obligations of the Buyer or Lessee • Anticipatory Repudiation. • A party communicates intention to not perform. • Constitutes breach of contract. • Nonbreaching party may suspend performance and treat the AR as material breach and pursue a remedy; or wait a reasonable time. 

  21. Obligations of the Buyer or Lessee • Anticipatory Repudiation. • A Repudiation May Be Retracted. • Breaching party may ‘retract’ repudiation by any method that clearly indicates their intent. • However, no retraction if the nonbreaching party has materially changed their position.

  22. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When buyer breaches, seller has various UCC remedies, depending on circumstances: • Who has possession of the goods? • Are goods in transit? • Has buyer rejected or accepted the goods? 

  23. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods are in Possession of Seller or Lessor, she has the: • The Right to Cancel (Rescind) the Contract. • Seller must notify buyer. • Buyer is not discharged from remaining obligations. 

  24. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods are in Possession of Seller or Lessor, she has the: • Right to Withhold Delivery. • If material breach by buyer, seller can withhold delivery of all goods. • If non-material breach, seller can withhold delivery of this installment.

  25. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods are in Possession of Seller or Lessor, she has the: • Right to Resell or Dispose of Goods. • Seller can resell and keep profits from sale and hold buyer liable for difference. • Seller must give buyer notice of sale, unless goods are perishable.

  26. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods are in Possession of Seller or Lessor, she has the: • The Right to Recover Purchase Price. • Seller can bring action to recover purchase price or lease payments. • If seller must sue, he must hold goods for buyer, and sell any time before collecting the judgment.

  27. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods are in Possession of Seller or Lessor, she has the: • The Right to Recover Damages. • If buyer repudiates or wrongfully chooses to accept goods, seller can bring action to recover damages. • Damages: market price at the time & place of tender + incidentals.

  28. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods are in Transit, Seller has the right to: • Stop the Carrier and Cancel the Contract. • Resell Goods. • Sue to recover the Deficiency between contract price and market. • Right to Recover Damages.

  29. Remedies of the Seller or Lessor • When Goods in Possession of the Buyer or Lessee. • Recover the Purchase Price or Payments Due. • Right to Reclaim Goods.

  30. Remedies of the Buyer or Lessee • When Seller or Lessor Refuses to Deliver the Goods, Buyer has the right to: • Sue for Specific Performance and recover damages. • Cover: in some situations. • Replevy Goods. 

  31. Remedies of the Buyer or Lessee • When Seller or Lessor Refuses to Deliver the Goods, Buyer has the right to: Recover Damages. • CASE 14.3 Les EntreprisesJacques Defour & Fils, Inc. v. DinsickEquipment Corp. (2011). When did the Buyer fully perform? How did the Seller breach the contract?

  32. Remedies of the Buyer or Lessee • When Seller Delivers Nonconforming Goods, Buyer has the: • Right to Reject Goods. • Buyer must timely notify seller of rejection and reasons and follow seller’s directions. • Merchant-buyer has good faith obligation to follow reasonable instructions.

  33. Remedies of the Buyer or Lessee • When Seller Delivers Nonconforming Goods, Buyer has the: • Right to Revoke Acceptance, if • Acceptance assumed defect would be cured, • Nonconformity was discovered after acceptance, or • Effective upon notice to seller.

  34. Remedies of the Buyer or Lessee • When Seller Delivers Nonconforming Goods, Buyer has the: • Right to Recover Damages for Accepted Goods. • Buyer may keep the goods and recover any loss in ordinary course of events. • Measure of damages: difference between value of accepted goods and goods as warranted.

  35. Limitations of Remedies • Additional Provisions Affecting Remedies. • Exclusive Remedies. • Consequential Damages. • Lemon Laws.

More Related