4.10 L. Claims of Breach
4.10L. Claims of Breach BILATERAL CONTRACTS
One of the elements that the plaintiff must prove is defendants breach of contract.Failure to perform a contract in accordance with its terms constitutes a breach of contract.It does not matter if the failure was purposeful or inadvertent.
One of the elements that the plaintiff must prove is defendants breach of contract.Failure to perform a contract in accordance with its terms constitutes a breach of contract.It does not matter if the failure was purposeful or inadvertent.
The plaintiff claims the defendant breached the contract in the following manner:
[State the facts claimed to constitute the breach]
The defendant denies this.The defendant contends[state contention].
A breach may be material or minor.[1]Plaintiff can sue for any breach, even if minor providing the breach causes the plaintiff measurable injury or damage.When
there has been a minor breach that may have caused the plaintiff injury
or damage, it is possible for you to conclude that the defendant has
nevertheless substantially performed the contract.
To
find that the defendant substantially performed the contract, you would
have to conclude from the evidence that the defendant made a good faith
effort that actually achieved the essential purpose of the contract and
provide the plaintiff with the fundamental benefits that plaintiff was
supposed to receive from the contract.[2]
Now,
let me explain what happens if you conclude the breach was not minor
but was material. A breach is material if it affects the purpose of the
contract in an important or vital way.[3]A
material breach defeats the purpose of the contract and is inconsistent
with the intention of the parties to be bound by the contract terms.
When a defendant materially breaches a contract, the plaintiff has a
right to terminate the contract and may be excused from further
performance of plaintiffs remaining obligations under the contract.[4]
When the plaintiffs promise under the contract was dependent upon the
defendants performance and the defendant fails to perform, then the
plaintiff is excused from his/her further performance of his/her
promise.[5]
When a party materially breaches the contract but does not indicate any
intention to renounce or repudiate the remainder of the contract, the
plaintiff can elect to either continue to perform or cease to perform.
If the plaintiff elects to perform, plaintiff is deprived of an excuse
for ceasing performance. But even if the plaintiff elects to perform,
plaintiff can still sue for any injury or damages suffered because of
the material breach.[6]
[1]The generally accepted rule is that [W]hether a breach is material is a question of fact.Farnsworth on Contracts,Sec. 8.16 (1990).However,
New Jersey courts will enforce a contractual provision establishing
that a particular breach is grounds for termination of the contract.See Dunkin Donuts of Am., Inc. v. Middletown Donut Corp.,100N.J.166
(1985) (upholding termination of franchise on basis of contractual
provision that made it clear that franchisees breach was grounds for
termination);Gorrie v. Winters,214N.J. Super.103 (App. Div. 1986) (courts shall enforce mutually agreed and expressly stated time of the essence clause),certif. denied,107N.J.114 (1987).
Dunkin Donutsinvolved the termination of a doughnut franchise because the franchisee under reported gross sales.Although
the Court does not quote the provision of the franchise agreement, it
states the contract quite simply provided that a breach Smothergill (the
franchisee) was to be ousted from the stores and lose his right to
transfer them for value.Id.at 175.Although
the trial court upheld the franchisors termination of the franchise, it
required the franchisor to compensate the franchisee for the value of
the terminated franchise.The Supreme Court reversed on the grounds that the breaching party had no right to compensation.The Court explained that although equity abhors a forfeiture, it was not free to change or abrogate the terms of the contract.
The
foregoing suggests that because the franchise contracts are clear in
making the under reporting of sales a material breach of contract,
thereby entitling Dunkin Donuts to terminate the franchise and receive
damages due, equity should and must respect these contractual
provisions.(Id.at 184).
It
is not clear whether the franchise agreement actually described under
reporting of income as a material breach or whether it simply stated
that under reporting was a breach, and any breach was a ground for
termination.However,Dunkin Donutsdoes seem to
indicate that the court, not the jury, shall interpret the contract in
the first instance, and, if the contract makes clear that certain
behavior shall be deemed a material breach (that is, a breach warranting
cancellation of the contract), then the matter is an issue of law for
the court.In this case, the jury would decide only any factual issues relating to whether the material breach occurred.
[3]The Restatement of Contracts sets forth the following criteria for determining whether a breach is material:
a.the extent to which the injured party will be deprived of the benefit which he/she reasonably expected;
b.the extent to which the injured party can be adequately compensated for the part of that benefit of which he will be deprived;
c.the extent to which the party failing to perform or to offer to perform will suffer forfeiture;
d.the
likelihood that the party failing to perform or to offer to perform
will cure his failure, taking account of all the circumstances including
any reasonable assurances;
e.the
extent to which the behavior of the party failing to perform or to
offer to perform comports with standards of good faith and fair dealing.
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