Page 45 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a present breach?

A

Party doesn’t perform a contract obligation that has become absolute

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2
Q

When has an obligation become absolute?

A

When there are no unsatisfied or unexcused conditions

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3
Q

Why is it not a good idea to repudiate a contract on your own when the other party has materially breached?

A

Because if the court doesn’t agree that the breach was material, you are guilty of your own material breach

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4
Q

If one party breaches, what does the UCC say you can do?

A

Withhold partial payment

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5
Q

What are the two effects that a material breach has?

A

Gives an immediate cause of action for breach of the whole contract, and excuses any further performance by the innocent party

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6
Q

What can you do if a minor breach has happened?

A

Sue for partial breach and get damages, but you can’t cancel the contract

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7
Q

If you have an ongoing contact with someone, and halfway through, they commit a minor breach, what can you do?

A

You can sue for damages, but you cannot terminate, and if you do, then you are in breach and the other party can sue you

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8
Q

How does the UCC treat “time is of the essence”?

A

It is not applicable to UCC

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9
Q

If you just write a date for performance, does that make time of the essence?

A

No, the contract has to specifically state that time is of the essence

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10
Q

If a contract has a date for performance, but doesn’t say that time is of the essence, must the party perform on that day?

A

No, they can have a reasonable delay without a breach, but unreasonable delays are total breach

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11
Q

If contract says that time is of the essence, and there is a delay, what happens?

A

The delay is a total breach

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12
Q

If a party excuses the time is of the essence clause, can they reinstate it later?

A

Yes, but only if the other party didn’t detrimentally rely on the waiver

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13
Q

What are the two different views about not performing on time if there is a time is of the essence provision?

A
  • traditional: even a slight delay is a material breach
  • today: to avoid disproportionate forfeitures, all of the circumstances are considered and a minor delay is not material unless language stipulates the effect of the delay
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14
Q

What is involved in the UCC exception to a material breach that allows for “time to cure”?

A

UCC time to cure if:
- time for performance hasn’t come yet: seller can make a conforming delivery within the contract time
- time for performance already passed: seller can cure if:
• he had reasonable grounds to believe tender would be accepted, and
• he seasonably notified buyer (or it came to his attention) of intention to cure and he cures within a reasonable time

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15
Q

What are the options for a buyer if nonconforming goods were delivered to him under the UCC?

A

He can accept or reject them within a reasonable time after tender and recover damages if he gives proper notice of the nonconformity

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16
Q

If a buyer accepts nonconforming goods, what happens to his right to rejection?

A

It is terminated and the buyer must pay the contract rate

17
Q

What are three ways to accept nonconforming goods under the UCC?

A
  • not reject them
  • express acceptance
  • do an act that is inconsistent with the seller’s ownership