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This question is from business law as one my course unit and it was acourse work given to me tofind answers.
My email address is masswils@yahoo.com.

2007-05-14 23:30:16 · 11 answers · asked by undertaker 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

11 answers

Fail to fulfill the terms as contrated for.

2007-05-14 23:33:15 · answer #1 · answered by wizjp 7 · 1 0

I think that this question may well be aimed at the difference between breach of contract and fundamental breach of contract. A breach of contract is normally when some has not fulfilled the exact requirements of the contract. i.e a contract o deliver 10 tonnes of material and only 9 get delivered. In such as case you take action for damages but you are still obliged to full-fill at least in part your side of the contract i.e pay the man. If no material was delivered the could still be a breach if no delivery date had been agreed so you could sue for late delivery but if time had been made the essence of the contract and no material was delivered in the date then this is a fundamental breach of contract and this ends the contract at that point. In this particular case that I have made up you could still sue for damages caused by late delivery but in many cases the contract just ceases to be at the time of a fundamental breach. There are cases of a contract in that a fundamental breach is Ab Initio (I think that is the right spelling) and in this case the contract is breach from the moment it was made so never actually existed.
Hope that helps

2007-05-15 06:49:08 · answer #2 · answered by Maid Angela 7 · 0 0

Simple. Fail to abide by the terms or conditions of the contract, whatever they may be.

You sure this is what you want to know, or do you want to know how to get out of a contract legally? That would involve a formal, written agreement by both parties to void the contract.

By the way, don't give out your email address on here, you need to check here back for answers and you may receive all sorts of rubbish in your email.

2007-05-15 06:45:38 · answer #3 · answered by champer 7 · 0 0

You are breaching a contract right now. In your school you have a verbal contract with the school and/or your teacher when you signed up for the class that you would do your own homework and assignments.

By asking people here for the answers instead of you doing your own homework, you have breached that contract.

2007-05-15 06:38:25 · answer #4 · answered by thunder2sys 7 · 0 0

A renter has to leave unexpectadly and leaves the rest of the year lease open for the land lord......otherwise, the landlord wants to sell the property and breaches the conctract by kicking the tenants out (case in point, the downtown LA district, Compton, Watts, etc.) and selling the property to high roller real estate agents.

2007-05-15 06:34:40 · answer #5 · answered by kaliroadrager 5 · 0 0

Depends on how strict the contract is written. It could be as simple as breaking one condition of the contract. IE if the contract says that you must use block letters to write your name and you dont that would be a breach. Most of the time it is spelled out in the contract what you must do to break the contract.

2007-05-15 06:57:06 · answer #6 · answered by bildymooner 6 · 0 0

You are in breach when you fail to honour your side of the contract. Have a good day.

2007-05-15 06:55:15 · answer #7 · answered by wheeliebin 6 · 0 0

By definition a breach is not doing what you have agreed to do. Maybe you want to know how to resile from the contract without commting a breach.

2007-05-15 06:34:05 · answer #8 · answered by Tsotsi 3 · 0 1

By refusing or failing to carry out your obligations under that contract eg by failing to deliver goods (if you are the seller) or refusing to pay for those goods (if you are the buyer).

2007-05-15 06:33:29 · answer #9 · answered by Living in Britain 3 · 1 0

email address????

youask a question here you get the answer here.

You breach a contract by not keeping your side of the bargain



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2007-05-15 06:33:39 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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