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Posts Tagged ‘Impossibility’

COVID-19 Contract Performance Defenses under New York Law | Part II

April 14th, 2020 Contract Defenses, COVID-19 Considerations, COVID-19 Contract Defenses 1 Comment »
Contract Performance Defenses

Part I of “COVID-19 Contract Performance Defenses Under New York Law” discussed how New York law can, depending on the circumstances, provide a defense to breach of contract when the breach was necessitated by the COVID-19 shelter-in-place orders or other COVID-19-related considerations.

It discussed the impossibility defense, the effect of force majeure clauses, and the UCC commercial impracticability defense (which applies to contracts for the sale of goods).

This Part II discusses two additional, closely-related doctrines that may be relevant to excusing a COVID-19-necessitated breach: (a) frustration of purpose; and (b) illegality of performance.

Contract Performance Defenses

 

Frustration of Purpose

Under the impossibility doctrine, performance must be objectively impossible, and under the doctrine of commercial impracticability, impracticable. But under frustration of purpose doctrine, “[p]erformance remains possible but the expected value of performance to the party seeking to be excused has been destroyed by a fortuitous event, which supervenes to cause an actual but not literal failure of consideration.” Lloyd v. Murphy, 25 Cal.2d 48, 53 (1944) (en banc).

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COVID-19 Contract Performance Defenses under New York Law Part I

April 9th, 2020 Commercial Impracticability, COVID-19 Contract Defenses, Uniform Commercial Code Article 2 1 Comment »
performance | contract | excuse | defense

These are trying times, to say the least. Businesses have been shuttered or their operations substantially curtailed, millions of persons are out-of-work, and the economic future is uncertain. Those with performance obligations under business contracts may not be able to carry them out as agreed.

One economic result of this disruption is breach of contract and claims to recover for breach of contract. Generally, a breach is a breach, irrespective of the breaching party’s fault or best intentions.

But what happens when circumstances, like the unprecedented ones we’re experiencing today, intervene, leaving a business with no choice but to cease performance under a contract? Does that, under New York law, provide a business a defense to contract performance that can be asserted in litigation or arbitration?

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