Chapter 10 of Practical Contract Law for Paralegals
Course of Dealing
What has been done by the parties in the past
Cure
Seller delivers conforming goods before contract deadline, after buyer rejects non-conforming goods
Cover
Buyer obtains substitute goods
Tender Performance
Party’s indication that he is ready, willing, and able to perform
Frustration of Purpose
Contact has no remaining value for party due to an unanticipated event
Interchangeable
Fungible
Perfect Tender Rule
Buyer has reasonable time to reject goods that fail, in any respect, to conform to the contract
Satisfaction Clause
Contract provision requiring performance to the satisfaction of a specified individual
Anticipatory Breach
Belief that other party will not perform
Release
Discharge
Major Breach
Substantial breach of contract, usually excusing other party from further performance; see Material Breach
Insolvency
Unable to pay debts
Repudiation
A party’s words or actions indicating intention not to perform the contract
Perfect Performance
No deviations from contract; see Strict Performance
Assurance
A pledge or guarantee that gives confidence or security
Title
Ownership
Substantial Performance
Only minor deviations from contact specification; acceptable in most service contracts
Qui tam
Lawsuit in which a whistleblower can obtain reward for exposing misconduct involving government contracts.
Material Breach
Substantial breach of contract usually excusing other party from further performance; see Major Breach
Novation
New contract, involving new parties; cancels earlier contract
Force Majeure
Contract provision excusing performance for an event such as “act of God,” fire, labor dispute, accident, or transportation difficulty
Insecure Party
Party has good-faith belief that performance by other party is unlikely
Objective Impossibility
Impossibility in an objective sense; not personal
Tender
To make available
Mitigate
Limit or reduce damages
Strict Performance
No deviations from contract expectations; see Perfect Performance
Rescission
Mutual agreement to cancel
Bailee
Person, other than owner, who is in possession of goods under an arrangement called a bailment
Commercial Impracticability
A party may be excused from contract obligations if an unforeseen circumstance makes performance impracticable
Identified
Goods designated as the particular goods being sold
Sale or return
Seller delivers goods to buyer who resells or returns them to seller; buyer takes title until sale or return
Trade Usage
Industry standards for permissible deviations from specifications
Time is of the essence
Any performance delay constitutes breach