expectation; foreseeability contracts – prof merges 4.12.2011

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Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

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Page 1: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Expectation; Foreseeability

Contracts – Prof Merges

4.12.2011

Page 2: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Groves v. John Wunder Co.

Page 3: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011
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Groves v. John Wunder Co.

• Facts

• Procedural History

Page 7: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Groves v. John Wunder Co.

• Facts

• Procedural History

Why the award below for $15,000?

Page 8: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Groves

• According to π Groves, what is the proper measure of damages here?

Page 9: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Groves

• According to π Groves, what is the proper measure of damages here?

• Why?

Page 10: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Value of land at end of performance

Market value of land if K properly performed

Difference in value: “dimunition in value” measure

Page 11: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Cost to put land in condition req’d by K = $60,000

Dim. In value

Page 12: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Why did Minn. Supreme Ct. come out as it did?

Page 13: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Why did Minn. Supreme Ct. come out as it did?

• Does not want to “favor the faithless contractor”

• Why did trial court award do this?

Page 14: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What was Grove’s lost expectation?

Page 15: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What was Grove’s lost expectation?

• Did Court’s award exceed this amount?

Page 16: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Should the nature of the breach matter?

• Willful versus innocent

Page 17: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What about “efficient breach” story?

• Isn’t that a willful breach?

• Should it really matter?

Page 18: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

Page 19: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

Damn foolish business, this willfulness . . .

Globe Refining, n. 1 p. 517

Page 20: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What price estimate did the parties put on grading when the K was signed?

• $60,000 or $12,000?

Page 21: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What price estimate did the parties put on grading when the K was signed?

• $60,000 or $12,000?

• If $12,000, K price of $105,000 + $12,000 if Groves agreed to do the grading

Page 22: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What if they did estimate cost at 12,000; why was it more?

1. Wunder made a (big) mistake

2. Rise in labor costs

3. Wunder waited until the end, instead of grading as he went

Page 23: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What if they knew grading was going to be $60,000?

• K would have been for $165,000 if Groves had to do grading himself

Page 24: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What if they knew grading was going to be $60,000?

• K would have been for $165,000 if Groves had to do grading himself

• Why did grading turn out to be worth only $12,000?

Page 25: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

3 possibilities

• Great Depression drove down land prices

• Groves overesitmated value of graded land

• Groves had a special value for graded land

Page 26: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Peevyhouse v. Garland

Page 27: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011
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A Mountain Top Removal Mine, using a Dragline to remove overburden and mine coal. This particular mine took a very steep mountain, sliced the top off, creating a flat area, where after mining a school was built on the site, and is still being utilized. This was one school located in mountainous East Kentucky that did not ever have to worry about flooding!

Page 30: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Peevyhouse v. Garland

• Facts

• History

Page 31: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Do you agree with holding?

• Why or why not?

Page 32: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Is this a good way to remedy land use problems?

• No requirement that owner use the damage award to remedy the problem

• See notes after Groves . . .

Page 33: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Rest. 2d. § 348(2)

(2) If a breach results in defective or unfinished construction and the loss in value to the injured party is not proved with sufficient certainty, he may recover damages based on.

(a) the diminution in the market price of the property caused by the breach, or

(b) the reasonable cost of completing performance or of remedying the defects if that cost is not clearly disproportionate to the probable loss in value to him.

Page 34: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Rest. - commentDamages based on the cost to remedy the defects

would then give the injured party a recovery greatly in excess of the loss in value to him and result in a substantial windfall. Such an award will not be made. It is sometimes said that the award would involve “economic waste,” but this is a misleading expression since an injured party will not, even if awarded an excessive amount of damages, usually pay to have the defects remedied if to do so will cost him more than the resulting increase in value to him.

Page 35: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Hadley v. Baxendale

Page 36: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Gloucester Mills Today

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Modern mill shaft

Page 40: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Hadley v. Baxendale

• Facts

• History

Page 41: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What is the holding in Hadley?

Page 42: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What is the holding in Hadley?

• Is it that the π’s damages must be limited to those of an “average” or “normal” person in his or her position?

Page 43: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

What is the holding in Hadley?

• Is it that the π’s damages must be limited to those of an “average” or “normal” person in his or her position?

No; then why were the higher damages denied here?

Page 44: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Holding

• New trial

• Damages: £ 2, 4 s; £ 25; £ 300?

Page 45: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Alderson opinion

• K damages fall into two categories . . .

Page 46: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Alderson opinion

• K damages fall into two categories . . .

1. “Naturally arising” damages

2. “In contemplation of both parties at time K was formed”

Page 47: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Why lower damages here?

1. Naturally arising?

Page 48: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Why lower damages here?

1. Naturally arising?

2. In contemplation of both parties?

Page 49: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

§ 351. Unforeseeability And Related Limitations On Damages

(1) Damages are not recoverable for loss that the party in breach did not have reason to foresee as a probable result of the breach when the contract was made.

(2) Loss may be foreseeable as a probable result of a breach because it follows from the breach

(a) in the ordinary course of events, or

(b) as a result of special circumstances, beyond the ordinary course of events, that the party in breach had reason to know.

Page 50: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

A and B make a written contract under which A is to recondition by a stated date a used machine owned by B so that it will be suitable for sale by B to C. A knows when they make the contract that B has contracted to sell the machine to C but knows nothing of the terms of B's contract with C. Because A delays in returning the machine to B, B is unable to sell it to C and loses the profit that he would have made on that sale. B's loss of reasonable profit was foreseeable by A as a probable result of the breach at the time the contract was made.

Page 51: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

The profit that B would have made under his contract with A was extraordinarily large because C promised to pay an exceptionally high price as a result of a special need for the machine of which A was unaware. A is not liable for B's loss of profit to the extent that it exceeds what would ordinarily result from such a contract. To that extent the loss was not foreseeable by A as a probable result of the breach at the time the contract was made.

Page 52: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Delchi Carrier v. Rotorex

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Delchi Carrier v. Rotorex

• Facts

• History

Page 58: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

CISG

• In effect; “self-executing”

Page 59: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Holding

• Award of damages for lost sales

• Plus incidental costs

Page 60: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Kenford v. Erie

Page 61: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Buffalo Bills Stadium

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Kenford v. Erie

• Facts

• History

• Holding

Page 66: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

Holding

• No damages for lost appreciation in land close to planned stadium site

• “not in contemplation of the parties”

Page 67: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

• “Tacit agreement” test

• Discredited

• Do you see why?

Page 68: Expectation; Foreseeability Contracts – Prof Merges 4.12.2011

R2 351(3)

(3) A court may limit damages for foreseeable loss by excluding recovery for loss of profits, by allowing recovery only for loss incurred in reliance, or otherwise if it concludes that in the circumstances justice so requires in order to avoid disproportionate compensation