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Breach of Contract
Breach of Contract When a contract is formed but one party fails to carry out its end of the bargain, then there has been a breach of the contract. In civil court, you can ask for a number of different remedies for breach of consumer contracts. First, you can sue for expectation damages. Expectation damages are the difference between the value that would be expected if the breaching party had fulfilled its promise and the value of what the injured party actually received. For example, assume you order ten compact discs through a mail-order catalog and pay $100, but the company sends you only six compact discs. Assume that the market value of the six discs is $60. The expectation damages would be $40—the difference between the full value of what you were promised ($100) and the value of what you actually received ($60) in the mail. You would not have to return the discs you received. Another remedy is rescission and restitution. When you ask the court for this remedy, you ask it to cancel, the contract (rescission) and order the person you are suing to give back, or refund, any money you have already paid (restitution). This releases you from any further obligations under the contract, but you will have to return any benefit already received under the contract. Assume, for example, that you sign a contract to purchase a set of cookware and a pan melts the first time it is exposed to a direct flame. In such a case, you might seek rescission and restitution. You would get your money back and would have no further obligations under the contract, but you would have to return the cookware set. A third type of civil remedy is specific performance. With this remedy, the buyer asks the court to order the seller to carry out the specific terms of the agreement. For example, if you ordered goods that were never delivered, the court could order the company to deliver the goods to you. In the case of specific performance, you would still have to pay for the goods. A suit for breach of contract in which you sue for expectation damages or for specific performance is designed to place you in approximately the same position you would have been in had the contract been successfully completed. A suit for rescission and restitution is designed to return both the buyer and the seller to the positions they were in before the contract began.
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