BUS 241 Chapter 16
Commercial Impracticability
A doctrine that may excuse the duty to perform a contract when performance becomes much more difficult or costly due to forces that neither party could control or contemplate at the time the contract was formed.
Warranties
An assurance, either expressed or implied, by one party that the other party can rely on its representations of fact; in sales, a binding promise regarding a product in the event that the product does not meet the manufacturer's or seller's promises.
Warranties of Title
An assurance, inferred in every UCC sales transaction, that the seller has good and valid title to the goods and has the right to transfer the title free and clear of any liens, judgments, or infringements of intellectual property rights of which the buyer does not have knowledge.
Implied Warranty of Merchantability
An assurance, inferred in every sale unless clearly disclaimed, that merchantable goods will conform to a reasonable performance expectation. The purchaser must have purchased or leased the good from a merchant.
Specific Performance
An equitable remedy in which the court orders the contract to be performed as agreed to by the parties.
Under the UCC, the goods must be merchantable, meaning that they must:
Be able to pass without objection in the trade or market for similar goods. In the case of fungible goods, be of fair average quality within the description. Be fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used. Be produced, within the variations permitted by the agreement, with even kind, quality, and quantity in each unit and among all units involved. Be adequately contained, packaged, and labeled as the agreement may require. Conform to the promises or affirmations made on the container or label, if any.
Although no warranties automatically arise under the common law, the UCC assumes that the seller:
Has good and valid title to the goods Has the right to transfer title free and clear of any liens, judgments, or infringements of intellectual property rights of which the buyer does not have knowledge.
Consequential Damages
In a contract, foreseeable damages that result from special facts and circumstances arising outside the contract itself. The damages must be within the contemplation of the parties at the time the breach occurs. Also called special damages.
Cure
a breaching party's right to provide conforming goods when nonconforming goods were initially delivered; subject to a reasonable time test
substantial impairment
a concept, used to modify the perfect tender rule, whereby a buyer can revoke acceptance of goods and, with installment contracts, a buyer/lessee can reject an installment of a particular item only if the defects substantially impair the value of the goods
What are buyers and lessees obligated to do under the UCC?
accept and pay for conforming goods in accordance with the contract
Implied warranty of trade usage
an assurance, inferred in the context of certain UCC sales, depending on the circumstances, that can be created through a well-accepted course of dealing or trade usage
Express warranty
any description of a good's physical nature or its use, in either general or specific circumstances, that becomes part of the contract
Usage of trade
any practice that members of an industry expect to be part of their dealings
Liquidated Damages
damages identified before the breach occurs
conforming goods
goods that conform to contract specifications
course of dealing
previous commercial transactions between the same parties
commercial reasonableness
reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing, required of merchants in addition to honesty in fact
tender of delivery
requirement that the seller or lessor have and hold conforming goods at the disposal of the buyer or lessee and give the buyer or lessee reasonable notification to enable him or her to take delivery
Perfect Tender Rule
requirement that the seller to deliver goods in conformity with the terms of the contract, right down to the last detail
Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act
requires that if a seller decides to issue a written warranty for a consumer good (the seller is not required to do so), the seller must indicate whether that warranty is a full warranty or a limited warranty. This applies to any consumer good sold for more than $10. If the written warranty is silent, it is presumed to be a full warranty, which means that if the good fails or is defective, the good or its defective part will be replaced. If replacement cannot be timely effected, the buyer has the right to a refund or a full replacement. If the good is sold for more than $15, the written warranty must disclose a number of items of information—names and addresses of the warrantors, any limitations on the warranty, and the procedures required to activate the warranty remedies—all in readable and easily understood language, in other words, not in legalese.
The obligations of sellers/lessors and buyers/lessees are determined by
terms the parties outline in agreements, custom, and rules outlined by the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)
course of performance
the history of dealings between the parties in the particular contract at issue
What can the buyer/lessee do if goods or tender of delivery fails in any respect to conform to the contract?
to accept the goods, reject the entire shipment, or accept part and reject part
What are sellers and lessors obligated to do under the UCC?
transfer and deliver conforming goods
Implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
when a seller or lessor knows or has reason to know (1) why the buyer or lessee is purchasing or leasing the goods in question and (2) that the buyer or lessee is relying on him or her to make the selection. Under this warranty, a seller or lessor does not have to be a merchant
Substantial Performance
when all the material elements of a contract are satisfied even if some nonmaterial requirements may not be satisfied