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Contract Law: Breach Remedies

This document summarizes remedies for breach of contract, specifically damages. It discusses key principles such as: 1. Causation and remoteness of damages - the plaintiff must show the loss was directly caused by the breach and was not too remote. 2. Mitigation of loss - the plaintiff must make reasonable efforts to reduce damages. 3. Types of damages - including loss of bargain, reliance loss, and restitution. Factors like actual and market values are considered. 4. Some types of damages are not recoverable, like injury to feelings, while others like discomfort may be in specific circumstances.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views5 pages

Contract Law: Breach Remedies

This document summarizes remedies for breach of contract, specifically damages. It discusses key principles such as: 1. Causation and remoteness of damages - the plaintiff must show the loss was directly caused by the breach and was not too remote. 2. Mitigation of loss - the plaintiff must make reasonable efforts to reduce damages. 3. Types of damages - including loss of bargain, reliance loss, and restitution. Factors like actual and market values are considered. 4. Some types of damages are not recoverable, like injury to feelings, while others like discomfort may be in specific circumstances.

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snr.chase
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Contract Law

REMEDIES FOR BREACH 1 - DAMAGES

1. CAUSATION

The plaintiff must show that his loss was one which resulted from a breach
of contract by the defendant (a direct causal link).
An act of the defendant in a sequence of events leading to a loss might
not be held to be the cause of the loss. For example, a shipowner was not
liable to a charterer when, as a result of delay, the ship ran into a
typhoon, as such a catastrophe may occur anywhere: The Monarch SS Co Case
[1949] AC 196.
If there are two causes of the state of affairs resulting in damage, and
both causes have equal effect, one will be sufficient to carry a judgment
for damages. See:
Smith, Hogg & Co v Black Sea Insurance [1940] AC 997.
An intervening act of a third party which itself causes the loss to the
plaintiff, or aggravates the loss, caused by the defendant's breach, will
not absolve the defendant from liability if the intervening act was
reasonably foreseeable (the Victoria Laundry and The Heron II principles,
below). Compare:
Stansbie v Troman [1948] 2 KB 48
Weld-Blundell v Stephens [1920] AC 956.

2. REMOTENESS OF DAMAGE

Not every type of damage caused to the plaintiff as a result of the breach
of contract will be recoverable. If the loss flowing from the breach of
contract is too remote then it cannot be recovered. Losses, to be
recoverable, must have been within the reasonable contemplation of the
parties. See:
Hadley v Baxendale (1849) 9 Exch 341.
Damages are recoverable under two limbs under Hadley v Baxendale: (i)
Damages which may fairly and reasonably be considered as arising naturally
from the breach; (ii) Damages which may reasonably be supposed to have
been in the contemplation of the parties, as liable to result from the
breach, at the time of the contract.
The Court of Appeal took the opportunity to review and restate the
principles governing the measure of damages in:
Victoria Laundry v Newman Industries [1949] 2 KB 528.
The principles relating to remoteness of damage were further considered in
the House of Lords and given greater refinement in:
The Heron II [1969] 1 AC 350.
The effect of "the two limbs" in Hadley v Baxendale is as follows:-
Losses which occur "in the ordinary course of things" only are recoverable
under the first limb. See:
Pilkington v Wood [1953] Ch 770.
The defendant's knowledge of special circumstances under the second limb
is not in itself sufficient to make him liable. There must be knowledge
and acceptance by the defendant of the purpose and intention of the
plaintiff. Compare:

Horne v Midland Railway (1873) LR 8 CP 131


Simpson v L & N Railway (1876) 1 QBD 274.

3. MITIGATION OF LOSS

It is the duty of every plaintiff to mitigate his loss, that is, to do his
best not to increase the amount of damage done. There are three rules:
(i) The plaintiff cannot recover for loss which the plaintiff could
have avoided by taking reasonable steps.
(ii) The plaintiff cannot recover for any loss he has actually
avoided, even though he took more steps than were necessary in
compliance with the above rule.
(iii) The plaintiff may recover loss incurred in taking reasonable
steps to mitigate his loss, even though he did not succeed.
The plaintiff must minimise the loss resulting from the breach by taking
all reasonable steps available to him. If he fails to do so, then he
cannot recover anything in respect of that extra loss. See:
Payzu v Saunders [1919] 2 KB 581.
However, the plaintiff is not expected to take risks in order to mitigate
losses caused by the defendant's breach:
Pilkington v Wood [1953] Ch 770.
If the plaintiff obtains any benefits as a result of his mitigation, these
must be taken into account. See:
British Westinghouse v Underground Electric Railway of London [1912]
AC 673.
Note the case of White & Carter v McGregor [1962] AC 413; an exception to
the general rule?

4. PURPOSE OF DAMAGES

Damages are meant to compensate the injured party for any consequences of
the breach of contract. The underlying principle is to put the injured
party financially as near as possible, into the position he would have
been in had the promise been fulfilled.
In Addis v Gramaphone Co Ltd [1909] AC 488, Lord Atkinson said: "I have
always understood that damages for breach of contract were in the nature
of compensation, not punishment."

5. HEADS OF DAMAGE & CALCULATION

There are several ways in which the plaintiff can be compensated for his
loss and the plaintiff is entitled to choose whichever form of
compensation he feels is most appropriate to his case.

HEADS OF DAMAGE
(i) LOSS OF BARGAIN
Damages for loss of bargain are assessable to put the plaintiff, so far as
money can do it, in the same situation as if the contract had been
performed. For example, in a contract for the sale of goods which are
defective, the plaintiff will (under this head) be entitled to damages
reflecting the differences between the price paid under the contract and
the actual value of the defective goods.
(ii) RELIANCE LOSS
Damages for reliance loss are designed to put the plaintiff in the
position he would have been, if the contract had never been made, by
compensating him for expenses he has incurred in his abortive performance.
See:
McRae v Commonwealth Disposals (1950) 84 CLR 377
Anglia Television v Reed [1972] 1 QB 60.

(iii) RESTITUTION
Where a bargain is made and the price paid, but the defendant fails to
deliver the goods, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover the price
paid plus interest thereon.

NOTE: Incidental losses are those which the plaintiff incurs after the
breach has come to his notice. They include the administrative costs of
buying a substitute, or sending back defective goods, or hiring a
replacement in the meantime. Consequential losses may be loss of profits,
for example, reliance loss, or further harm such as personal injury or
damage to property.
The plaintiff's choice of claim may be aided by the fact that more than
one of the claims is available to him. In such cases, the plaintiff can
combine the claims:
Millar's Machinery Co v David Way (1935) 40 Com Cas 240.

TIME FOR ASSESSMENT OF LOSS


The general rule is that damages are to be assessed at the time of the
breach. However, the court can postpone the date for assessment of damages
to a more appropriate time. See:
Johnson v Agnew [1980] 1 All ER 883.

CALCULATION OF DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF BARGAIN


Where the plaintiff claims for loss of bargain and that he be put in the
position as if the contract had been performed, two bases of assessment
are available: cost of cure and difference in value. See:
Peevyhouse v Garland Coal Co (1962) 382 P 2d 109.
In the majority of cases where there is a discretion, the court will
exercise this to use the most appropriate basis of assessment in the case.
However, certain rules do exist for working out the appropriate mode of
assessment:
(i) In sale of goods contracts if a defect can be cured at a
reasonable cost, the cost of cure will be awarded, otherwise the
difference in value is awarded.
(ii) In building contracts, cost of cure basis is usual, and the
builder must put the defects right. However, if the cost of cure is
greater than the whole value of the building, then only the difference
in value will be awarded. This issue was considered by the House of
Lords in:
Ruxley Electronics & Construction v Forsyth [1995] 3 WLR 118.

ACTUAL AND MARKET VALUES


Where damages are based on the difference in value principle, then market
values may be taken into account to assess the plaintiff's loss. For
example, where the defendant fails to deliver goods or render services,
then the plaintiff can go into the market and obtain these goods or
services at the prevailing price. Therefore the plaintiff's damages will
be the difference between the market price and the price of the goods or
services in the contract. There are two rules:
(i) Under s51 SGA 1979, where a seller wrongfully neglects or refuses
to deliver the goods to the buyer, the buyer may maintain an action
against the seller for damages for non-delivery. But such an action
will not allow the seller to recover for anything more than the
difference between the market value and the contract value.
(ii) If the defendant wrongfully refuses to accept and pay for the
goods, then the plaintiff can sue for the loss of profit on that
transaction in certain circumstances. Compare:
Thompson v Robinson (Gunmakers) Ltd [1955] Ch 177
Charter v Sullivan [1957] 2 QB 117.

DAMAGES WHICH ARE IRRECOVERABLE


The plaintiff may be able to recover damages for injury to feelings in
tort, but in contract such damages are irrecoverable. See:
Addis v Gramaphone Company [1909] AC 488.
This principle was reaffirmed by the Court of Appeal in Bliss v South East
Thames Regional Health Authority [1985] IRLR 308 (an unfair dismissal
case).

OTHER TYPES OF DAMAGE


(i) Discomfort, vexation and disappointment
In Jarvis v Swan Tours [1973] 2 QB 233, the plaintiff solicitor, went on a
Swan Tour and sued for damages because the hotels and buses fell short of
the standards promised. It was held that the plaintiff could recover
damages for the disappointment and discomfort he had been caused as a
result. See also Jackson v Horizon Holidays.
However, there is a limit to damages for distress for breach of contract.
In Bliss, Dillon LJ stated that such damages should be confined to cases
"where the contract which has been broken was itself a contract to provide
peace of mind or freedom from distress". Recently, the Court of Appeal
made it clear that they were not prepared to extend the circumstances in
which damages for distress or disappointment might be granted:
Alexander v Rolls Royce Motor Cars [1995] TLR 254.
(ii) Inconvenience
In Bailey v Bullock [1950] 2 All ER 1167, a solicitor failed to take
proceedings to recover his client's house for him and was held liable in
damages for the inconvenience caused by reason of the client having to
live with his wife's parents for two years.
(iii) Diminution of future prospects
In Dunk v George Waller [1970] 2 QB 163, an apprentice was wrongfully
dismissed, but had he been allowed to complete his apprenticeship he would
have got a certificate entitling him to certain jobs at certain wages.
Without this certificate, his chances were lessened and he claimed damages
for diminution of future prospects. He was held to be entitled to damages
on this basis as the object of his apprenticeship was to enable him to get
better employment.
(iv) Speculative damages
If the plaintiff's loss is the chance of doing something or benefiting
from doing something, and this contingency is outside the control of the
parties, then he is entitled to damages if the defendant's breach of
contract denies him this chance. For example, in Chaplin v Hicks [1911] 2
KB 786, the plaintiff recovered damages for loss of the chance to take
part in a beauty contest.

6. LIQUIDATED DAMAGES & PENALTY CLAUSES

The parties to the contract may make a genuine assessment of the losses
which are likely to result in the event of a breach, and stipulate that
such sum shall be payable in the event of a breach. Such clauses are known
as liquidated damages clauses and will be effective in the event of a
breach, and the plaintiff will not recover more than that sum. (No action
for unliquidated damages will be allowed.)
If, however, the clause is not an assessment of losses, but is intended as
punishment on the contract-breaker, then the clause is a penalty clause
and is void. In an action for breach of contract it is disregarded.
The parties may often be in dispute over whether the clause was a penalty
or a liquidated damages clause. Various rules have been formulated to deal
with such contingencies. See:
Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co v New Garage [1915] AC 79.
Where the contract has underestimated damages in the event of a breach,
either because of inflation or through bad bargaining, damages will be
limited to the amount stipulated by the contract. See:
Cellulose Acetate v Widnes Foundries [1933] AC 20.
If the clause is in fact a penalty clause, then as it is void, the
plaintiff can ignore it and sue for his actual loss:
Wall v Rederiaktiebolaget Luggude [1915] 3 KB 66.

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