10. Discharge and Variation of Contract Flashcards

1
Q

What are the five ways in which a contract can be discharged?

A
  1. Agreement
  2. Variation
  3. Performance
  4. Breach
  5. Frustration
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2
Q

How is a contract discharged by agreement?

A

All parties essentially form a new agreement (which must be supported by consideration) to end the old agreement

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3
Q

How can obligations amount to consideration for the new contract to end the previous one by agreement?

A

If both parties have unperformed obligations, each will be suffering a detriment, and the acceptance by both of this detriment is valid consideration

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4
Q

How is a contract discharged by variation?

A

All parties agree to vary the original agreement, and this must be supported by consideration

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5
Q

How does the equitable doctrine of waiver apply in the context of variation?

A

If a party promises not to enforce another party’s obligations under a contract, the court may conclude that the first party has waived its rights in respect of non-performance

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6
Q

Where a party promises not to enforce another party’s obligations, how can the first party reinstate the original terms?

A

By giving reasonable notice

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7
Q

When will the implied variation or waiver arise?

A

When the parties have proceeded as if there is a varied agreement between them but nothing is actually said

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8
Q

Is consideration required for implied variation?

A

Yes

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9
Q

Is consideration required for implied waiver?

A

No

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10
Q

Why is consideration not required for implied waiver?

A

In the same way it is not required for waiver generally, the courts are applying an equitable remedy to get around the legal requirement of consideration

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11
Q

What is the entire obligations rule in the context of performance?

A

Generally, only full, exact, and precise performance will discharge a contract

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12
Q

What is an exception to the general entire obligations rule?

A

Substantial but imprecise performance can be sufficient to discharge a contract, and any minor breaches would be considered breaches of warranty only

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13
Q

Does the substantial performance exception to the entire obligations rule apply to divisible contracts?

A

No, each component is deemed its own contract

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14
Q

Is partial performance generally sufficient to discharge a contract?

A

No

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15
Q

What will the court conclude if partial performance is voluntarily agreed?

A

That the parties have agreed a new contract on revised terms, as long as there is consideration

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16
Q

In the context of voluntary agreement of partial performance, what generally serves as the fresh consideration?

A

Revision to the price to be paid

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17
Q

If a revised price is not agreed, how is payment determined under a partially performed contract?

A

On a quantum meruit (amount deserved) basis, i.e. pro rata to the work done

18
Q

What is the situation if the other party is given no choice but to accept partial performance?

A

This will not be enough to constitute agreement on the new terms

19
Q

What happens if one party prevents the other from performing their obligations under a contract?

A

The first party’s conduct may amount to a breach of contract

20
Q

What is a breach of contract?

A

When one party does not fulfil its obligations under the contract, through either:

  1. Non-performance or defective performance (actual breach), or
  2. Indicating it will not perform in future (anticipatory breach)
21
Q

What are the different options available to the innocent party depending on whether a contract is repudiated totally, a condition is breached, or a warranty is breached?

A

Repudiation/breach of condition:

May terminate the contract, and claim damages

Breach of warranty:

Damages only

22
Q

How does termination differ from rescission in the context of previously accrued rights and obligations?

A

Termination:
Prior rights and obligations remain in place

Rescission:
Prior rights and obligations disappear

23
Q

What is the innocent buyer’s option if goods have been delivered under the contract but there has been a breach because the goods do not conform to the contract?

A

The buyer is not obliged to pay, but must return the goods. The buyer may also claim damages.

24
Q

What happens to the right to terminate once a contract is affirmed?

A

It is lost

25
Q

What is an actual breach?

A

A breach taking place at the time of performance with no prior indication

26
Q

What is an anticipatory breach?

A

Before performance, one party indicates (expressly or impliedly) that they are not going to fulfil their obligations under a contract

27
Q

What are the innocent party’s three options in the context of an anticipatory breach?

A
  1. Accept the breach immediately
  2. Terminate and claim damages immediately
  3. Wait until contract due date
28
Q

What must be true of the anticipatory breach for the three options to be available to the innocent party?

A

The breach must be of a condition or be otherwise fundamental to the contract

29
Q

What is required for a contract to be discharged by frustration?

A

Performance is now either impossible, or radically difference from what was envisaged under the contract (even though technically still possible)

30
Q

What is an example of how a contract might be impossible to perform?

A

Subject matter no longer exists because it was destroyed or has become unavailable through no fault of the parties

31
Q

How do the courts view illness in the context of frustration for inability to perform?

A

The longer-term the illness, the more likely the court is to conclude a contract has been frustrated

32
Q

What is supervening illegality in the context of frustration of contract?

A

The conduct expected under a contract, whilst legal at formation, has now become illegal

33
Q

What are two requirements for frustration through radical difference?

A
  1. Radical difference must be fundamental to the contract
  2. Supervening event must not have been in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was formed
34
Q

Is a contract frustrated just because it is more difficult to perform?

A

No

35
Q

Is a contract frustrated if it has been caused by one of the parties?

A

No. This is just a breach by the offending party.

36
Q

What is the effect of either or both of the parties foreseeing the frustrating event?

A

The contract is not frustrated

37
Q

What is the likely way in which frustration will be tested on the exam?

A

The classic Krell v. Henry case where someone has hired a venue for a specific purpose known to the owner and a subsequent event occurs removing the reason for which the venue was hired

38
Q

If frustration applies, at what point is the contract deemed discharged?

A

From the moment the event occurred

39
Q

If a contract is deemed frustrated, what two things does the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 require?

A
  1. All sums paid in respect of the contract before discharge will be recoverable, and all sums payable before discharge cease to be payable, and
  2. Any valuable, non-monetary benefit obtained before the discharge may have to be paid for
40
Q

How can parties override these requirements of the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943?

A

Express term in the contract, agreed by the parties

41
Q

In addition to expressly overriding the application of the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943, to which three types of contracts will it not apply?

A
  1. Charterparties (contract for hire of ship and delivery of cargo)
  2. Contracts of insurance
  3. Contracts for the sale of goods where the reason for the frustration is the destruction/perishing of the goods