Consequential damages
Definition: consequential damages consist of loses beyond those covered by the standard measure that reasonable person would have foreseen would occur as a result of the breach.
Whether will receive consequential damages turns on:
also check for
Expectation damages
Merchant
One who regularly deals in goods of the kind sold or who otherwise by his occupation holds himself out as having knowledge or skill peculiar to the goods involved.
Goods
Goods are all things moveable at the time that they are identified as goods to be sold under the contract
Offer
An offer is an expression of willingness to enter into a bargain, made with _definite term_s so that the other party could reasonably believe that he could conclude the bargain by accepting
Acceptance
Consideration
SoF goods above 500
To be enforceable, a contract for the sale of goods:
Signature requirement
Battle of the Forms and oral agreements/confirmations
Merchant’s confirmatory memo
In contracts:
Part performance
Part performance is sufficient to take contracts out of the SoF when,
Implied Warranty of Fitness
implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose arises only when: (i) a seller has reason to know the particular purpose for which the goods are to be used and that the buyer is relying on the seller’s skill and judgment to select suitable goods; and (ii) the buyer in fact relies on the seller’s skill or judgment.
When is a revocation effective?
(i) it comes to a person’s attention, or (ii) it is delivered at a place of business through which the contract was made. The communication need not be read by the recipient to be effective.
When do TPB’s rights vest?
Generally, a third-party beneficiary has rights under the contract as soon as she does something to vest her rights (manifests assent to the promise, brings suit to enforce the promise, or materially changes position by justifiably relying on the promise).
Impracticability
Mutual mistake as to existing facts
If both parties entering into a contract are mistaken about existing facts (not future happenings) relating to the agreement, the contract may be voidable by the adversely affected party if:
(i) The mistake concerns a basic assumption on which the contract is made (for example, the parties think they are contracting for the sale of a diamond but in reality the stone is a cubic zirconia);
(ii) The mistake has a material effect on the agreed-upon exchange (for example, the cubic zirconia is worth only a hundredth of what a diamond is worth); AND
(iii) The party seeking avoidance did not assume the risk of the mistake. (ex: if you agree to pay damages to avoid a lawsuit, you assumed the risk of the mistake bitch)
Right to Reject Cut Off by Acceptance
A buyer’s right to reject under the perfect tender doctrine generally is cut off by acceptance. Under Article 2, a buyer accepts when:
a. After a reasonable opportunity to inspect the goods, they indicate to the seller that the goods conform to requirements or that they will keep the goods even though they fail to conform;
**possession usually denotes acceptance
b. They fail to reject within a reasonable time after tender or delivery of the goods or fail to seasonably notify the seller of their rejection;
OR
c. They do any act inconsistent with the seller’s ownership.
Note: you don’t “have a reasonable time after purchase to inspect”–once you accept re any of three (usually possession makes acceptances), then that’s it. You can’t accept the goods and then inspect and reject.
Pre-existing duty rule
Modern rule: modification w/o consideration
Modification under the UCC
Under Art. 2, contract modifications sought in good faith are binding without consideration
Good faith means there must be a legitimate commercial reason for the modification
Duress: defense
Merchant’s firm offer
If (i) a merchant (ii) offers to sell goods in a signed writing, and (iii) the writing gives assurances that it will be held open, (iv) the offer is not revocable for lack of consideration during the time stated.
Substantial performance
Notes: