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  2. Anticipatory repudiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anticipatory_repudiation

    (1) If an action based on anticipatory repudiation comes to 2-723 trial before the time for performance with respect to some or all of the goods, any damages based on market price (Section UCC 2-708 or Section UCC 2-713) shall be determined according to the price of such goods prevailing at the time when the aggrieved party learned of the ...

  3. Specific performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specific_performance

    Uniqueness of the Property: The subject of the contract, especially in real estate transactions, must be unique to such an extent that monetary damages would not be a sufficient remedy. Irreparable Harm: The aggrieved party would suffer irreparable harm if specific performance were not granted, such as in cases where real property’s unique ...

  4. Hochster v De La Tour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hochster_v_De_La_Tour

    Hochster v De La Tour [1853] EWHC J72 (QB) is a landmark English contract law case on anticipatory breach of contract. It held that if a contract is repudiated before the date of performance, damages may be claimed immediately.

  5. Breach of contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breach_of_contract

    Renunciatory breach (usually referred to as anticipatory breach or breach by anticipatory repudiation) is an unequivocal indication that the party will not perform when performance falls due or a situation in which future non-performance is inevitable. An anticipatory breach gives the innocent party the option to terminate the contract ...

  6. Highway Properties Ltd v Kelly, Douglas and Co Ltd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_Properties_Ltd_v...

    The decision imported the contract law concept of repudiation and recovery for prospective damages into property law. This gave landlords the right to sue a tenant for breach of a lease agreement (usually by abandonment) and recover the present value of unpaid future rent as well as losses resulting from lost business due to the tenant's breach ...

  7. Cover (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cover_(law)

    Cover is a term used in the law of contracts to describe a remedy available to a buyer who has received an anticipatory repudiation of a contract for the receipt of goods. . Under the Uniform Commercial Code, the buyer is permitted (but not required) to find another source of the same type of g

  8. Contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract

    A specific performance is obtainable for the breach of a contract to sell land or real estate on such grounds that the property has a unique value. In the United States by way of the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution , specific performance in personal service contracts is only legal " as punishment for a crime whereof the party ...

  9. Expectation damages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expectation_damages

    Expectation damages are damages recoverable from a breach of contract by the non-breaching party. An award of expectation damages protects the injured party's interest in realising the value of the expectancy that was created by the promise of the other party.