Chapter Five: Written Documents 1 Unsigned Documents 1


Chapter Two: Remedies The Interests Protected



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Chapter Two: Remedies

  1. The Interests Protected



Wetheim v Chicoutimi Pulp Company

Quote


Lord Atkinson:

  • "And it is the general intention of the law that, in giving damages for breach of contract, the party complaining should, so far as it can be done by money, be placed in the same position as he would have been in if the contract had been performed… That is a ruling principle. It is a just principle"



Bollenback v Continental Casualty Company

Modern Restitution: Can receive deducted partial consideration + definitions


Issue

Ratio

Notes

  • P has health insurance with D for several years

  • Attempts to make a claim

  • D claims his policy laps due to nonpayment (an error) several years back

  • P tries to get rescission instead of performance

  • In a claim of restitution and rescission in a contract for ongoing services, the plaintiff is entitled to recover to the extent that it returns the plaintiff to the moment at which the defendant stopped performing

    • P recovers up til the moment D stopped covering him

Purpose of rescission and restitution:
- to return parties as near as possible to their positions before the formation of the contract so that the parties can find the desired performance elsewhere
-I gave you something … I want it back

Purpose of an action for damages:
- to put the injured party as near as possible to the position where he could have been if the contract had actually been performed

Anglia Television Ltd. v Reed

Reliance damages: Denning awarding wasted expenditure for breach of contract


Issue

Ratio

Notes

  • P contracted

  • Reliance Damages: A Plaintiff can claim damages for wasted expenses incurred prior to the formation of the contract if it can be reasonably held that those expenses were in the contemplation of the parties as likely to be wasted if the contract was broken and the contract was in fact broken by reason of the defendant's breach of contract

  • Plaintiff must have attempted to mitigate loss

  • Issue here is that reliance damages can put the plaintiff in a better position than at the start of the contract

Pitcher v Shoebottom

Damages for material breach (p agrees to buy land, d breaches and sells to third party)


Issue

Ratio

Notes

  • P agrees to buy D’s land

  • Starts making payments

  • D breaches and sells to 3rd party

  • Damages for material breach = the profit/value the plaintiff would have – the cost required to close the deal/get profits)

  • When no time of closing is specified a reasonable time is implied


Hawkins v McGee

Damages for breach of warranty for hairy hand


Issue

Ratio

Notes

  • P brings claim for damages

  • D promised a %100 good hand

  • D claims no one would believe that claim was a warranty

  • D had made promises because he wanted to experiment with skin grafting (promise to induce

  • The measure of damages for a breach of warranty is the value of the thing, if it had corresponded with the warranty and its actual value, together with such incidental losses as the parties knew, or ought to have known, would probably result from a failure to comply with its terms.

  • Damages for breach of warranty = (the value of the promised thing – the things actual value) + Incidental losses due to breach

  • Costs required to get the promised thing are not included (necessary expenditures... like the pain the plaintiff had to go through)

  • Hairy Hand


17.Problems in Measuring Damages

    1. Cost of Substitute Performance or Economic Value?

Carson v Willitts

How should damages be rewarded if assessing amount is difficult


Issue

Ratio

Notes

  • D Ks to bore 3 oil wells for P

  • D only drills one then breaches

  • What are the damages?

  • If an absence of evidence makes it impossible to assess damages then only nominal damages can be recovered

  • If damages are proved but the nature of the damages makes it difficult to assess an amount, this is no ground to refuse substantial damages

  • Oil wells could have been worth a lot or nothing

Groves v John Wunder Co

People’s ability to contract for worthless things. Damages = cost of performance, strong dissent


Issue

Ratio

Notes

  • P owned tract of land with a tonne of gravel on it

  • D payed money for gravel and promised to take the gravel and leave the land level

  • D took best gravel, then breached leaving land not graded




  • Tied to Jacob Young, if only partial performance is given the court tries to give the party what they contracted for: the court awards damages in the amount of the difference of the value of the thing constructed and what should have been constructed -> the figure for this type of contract is the hypothetical peak of accomplishment

  • Dissent argues that to reward more than economic compensation would be giving the plaintiff more money than the land is worth -> In order to receive this the land should be for some personal or unique purpose, not for ordinary economic purposes like sale


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