Contracts II Barebones Outline
Contracts II Barebones Outline
Contracts II Barebones Outline
SPRING 2013
PROF. KUNEY
THE PAROL EVIDENCE RULE
If a written agreement is fully integrated and intended by the parties to be a
complete statement of their agreement, then evidence of prior or contemporaneous
agreements will not be admitted to change its terms
Integration (R2d 209)
o A writing that is a final expression of one or more terms.
o A preliminary question for the
o Presumption of integration if by completeness and specificity it reasonably
appears to be a complete agreement.
Complete v. Partial Integration (R2d 210)
o Complete = adopted as complete & exclusive statement of the deal.
o Partial = not complete.
o A preliminary question for the court, not the jury.
R2d 213
o Completely Integrated Agreement Discharges Prior and Contemporaneous
Inconsistent Agreements.
o Partially Integrated Agmt. Discharges Prior and Contemporaneous Agreements
w/in its Scope.
The Parol Evidence Rule/Extrinsic Evidence
o What is evidence of prior and contemporaneous agreements and negotiations
good for? R2d 214.
Questions of Integration and its Completeness
the Meaning of the Writing
Illegality
Fraud
Duress
Mistake
Lack of Consideration, or other Formation Defense
and Proper Remedy.
R2d 215
o But, other than as stated in R2d 214, you cant use evidence of prior or
contemporaneous agreements to contradict a completely or partially
integrated agreement!
R2d 216
o Evidence of prior consistent terms can be used to supplement a partially, but
not a completely, integrated agreement, but not to contradict its terms.
The UCC Approach 2-202.
o Basically the same as the Restatement, no contradiction of an integrated
agreement, but we CAN supplement or explain terms using:
o Course of performance, course of dealing, or
usage of trade; or
o Evidence of consistent additional terms unless
the agreement was
completely integrated.
INTERPRETATION
Traditional Four Corners of the Document Rule
look for an ambiguity to justify going outside the four corners of the
document; no ambiguity, you are stuck with the words of the document.
The Traynor 2-Step
o We all have a different dictionary in our heads.
o So, provisionally admit the evidence to determine if the meaning is one to
which the contract is reasonably susceptible. If so, it comes in for real.
o
WARRANTY LIABILITY
General
o A warranty is a statement made about certain facts whereby the warrantor
promises to ensure that those facts are as stated.
o A breached or incorrect warranty will support an action for damages sounding
in contract; standard = strict liability.
o Warranties are risk shifting devices that is their whole point. Fault is
irrelevant to warranty liability.
UCC Warranties
o Express Warranties UCC sec. 2-313
You dont have to say warrant or any other magic words.
A mere description of the goods will do it; the warranty to conform to
the description is implied.
Showing a sample or a model is a warranty that the goods will conform
to it.
UCC 2-313 Issues
When is the statement an affirmation of fact and not just mere
puffing.
Whether it is part of the basis of the bargain something
short of actual reliance perhaps knowledge of the warranty
and rebuttable presumption of reliance.
Cases: Royal Business Machines & Bayliner
o Implied Warranty of Merchantability
UCC 2-314 Read the Statute.
Unless excluded or modified (2-316) warranty of merchantability is
implied if seller is a merchant for those goods.
2-314(2) The laundry list of merchantability.
Cases: Bayliner, Am. Cyanamid, GM v. Brewer, Suminski.
o Warranty of Fitness for a Particular Purpose
UCC 2-315 Read the Statute.
If seller knows of buyers particular purpose and that buyer is relying
on sellers expertise, the warranty arises.
Cases: Lewis v. Mobil Oil, Bayliner
Exclusion or Modification of Warranties
o UCC 2-316(1)
exclude or modify merchantability, must use that word and, if in
writing, do it conspiciously.
o UCC 2-316(2)
sufficient to say there are no warranties beyond those expressed
above.
o UCC 2-316(3)
But, you can use common language to exclued: As is, etc.
And inspection or failure to inspect when that ought to have disclosed
the problem does it too.
Exclusionary Clauses re Warranties
the difference between the market price at the time when the
buyer learned of the breach and
the contract price together with any incidental and consequential
damages provided in this Article (Section 2-715), but less expenses
saved in consequence of the sellers breach.
o (2) Market price is to be determined as of the place for tender or, in cases
of rejection after arrival or revocation of acceptance, as of the place of
arrival.
Restatement 2d 234
If mutual, simultaneous interpretation possible, use that;
If one performance takes time, then that performance is due first;
UNLESS PROVIDED OTHERWISE.
Holmes Admits It:
o You can always imply a condition in a contract. But why do you imply it? It is
because of some belief as to the practice of the community or of a class, or
because of some opinion as to policy, or, in short, because of some attitude of
yours upon a matter not capable of exact quantitative measurement, and therefor
not capable of founding exact logical conclusions. Such matters really are battle
grounds . . . where the decision can do no more than embody the preference of a
given body in a given time and place. We do not realize how large a part of our
law is open to reconsideration upon a slight change in the habit of the public
mind.
-- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 457, 466
(1897) (emphasis added).
Material Breach of Covenant or Substantial Performance?
o A material breach is one that goes to the heart of the contract. It will suspend
executory counter-performances as well as support a claim for damages. It will
ripen into total breach after expiration of a reasonable time for cure, which
excuses executory counter-performance.
o The doctrine of substantial performance is the flip side of material breach. If
a party substantially performed, or the breach is immaterial, counter-performance
is not excused. A claim for damages will still lie.
Events of Default and Remedies
o Your contract can provide for conditional remedies with events of default that
allow a party to declare a default and invoke remedies. This is where so called
financial covenant defaults come in.
o More like a suit to enforce a contract than for breach of it.
o When managing the contractual relationship, declaring a default, or exercising
remedies:
Establish dominance from the beginning and maintain it
throughout.
There is always time to surrender control or make gifts later.
After a reasonable time to inspect & buyer signifies to the seller that
will accept;
Failure to make effective rejection;
Any act inconsistent with sellers ownership (remember mixing the gas
or the milk with existing stock?).
UCC 2-608. Revocation of Acceptance if non-conformity substantially impairs
value to the buyer and:
Reasonable assumption that non-conformity would be cured and not
seasonably cured; or
Accepted without knowledge of the non-conformity because of
difficulty of discovery.
Must be within reasonable time after discovery or should have
discovered and before change of condition of goods not caused by nonconforming feature.
ANTICIPATORY REPUDIATION
Overview
o Anticipatory Repudiation is notice of an intent by the other party to breach.
o It can be express or implied.
o Express repudiation is a clear, positive, unequivocal refusal to perform.
(marry someone else, sell house to someone else)
o An implied repudiation results from conduct where the promisor puts it out
of his/her power to perform so as to make substantial performance impossible
(or total breach inevitable).
o Simple rules that are hard to apply in real life! (have to ask for assurances)
Anticipatory Repudiation Options of the Non-Repudiating Party
o When a promisor repudiates, the other party has an election of remedies:
-- Treat the repudiation as breach and immediately seek damages or
other remedies; or
-- Await the time for performance, exercising remedies then, or
suffering retraction and performance by the other should they change
their mind.
UCC Overlay on Repudiation
o UCC 2-609 and 2-610.
o 2-609
reasonable insecurity, use a writing to request adequate assurances of
performance. If they are not provided in reasonable time, not to
exceed 30 days, you may treat it as repudiation
o 2-610
repudiation leads to the right to:
Resort to remedies for breach (even if one told the other side
one would wait for their performance);
Suspend performance or identify goods to the contract or
salvage unfinished goods.
Retraction of Anticipatory Repudiation
o UCC 2-611
Retraction possible up to the time for performance unless the other
party has cancelled or materially changed position or considered
repudiation final.
Retraction may be by any reasonable method; must include assurances
if requested under 2-209.
Retraction reinstates the contract with due adjustment for delay
caused by repudiation.
Overview
o Impossibility old standard; if really impossible, then excuse performance.
Performance being possible = constructive condition.
o Impracticability modern standard, if it is just really tough, cost alone almost
never enough, especially a less than 100% increase.
o Frustration of Purpose -- Different.
Occurrence of some unanticipated event or circumstance that renders
the basic purpose of the contract impossible or pointless. Basic
purpose = constructive condition.
If the event that causes the problem was or might have been
anticipated and guarded against (i.e., its risk could have been
allocated between the parties), then do not excuse performance.
POLICY
Policy is a Fancy Word for Reasons Why We Do The Things We Do
Freedom of Contract
Freedom of Alienation
Economic Efficiency
Allowing (or Encouraging) Parties to Plan their Affairs and Allocate Risk Themselves
Deterrence
Efficient Administration of Justice