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This lecture series on contract law focuses on the remedies available when a contract is breached. It covers legal and equitable remedies, the measurement of damages, and the doctrines governing restitution and quasi-contract. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding these remedies for both academic analysis and practical application in resolving contractual disputes.
Takeaways
Understanding remedies is essential for practical application.
Expectation damages aim to place the non-breaching party in the position they would have occupied.
Consequential damages must be foreseeable and communicated during contract formation.
The injured party has a duty to mitigate damages.
Specific performance is available when legal damages are inadequate.
Restitution prevents unjust enrichment and measures the value of benefits conferred.
Liquidated damages clauses are enforceable if they are a reasonable estimate of likely loss.
Limitations on recovery can arise from contract terms and procedural doctrines.
The landscape of contract remedies balances fairness and economic efficiency.
Mastery of remedies informs how we enforce, draft, negotiate, and litigate contracts.
contract law, remedies, damages, expectation damages, equitable relief, mitigation, restitution, quasi-contract, liquidated damages, breach of contract
By The Law School of America3
4242 ratings
This lecture series on contract law focuses on the remedies available when a contract is breached. It covers legal and equitable remedies, the measurement of damages, and the doctrines governing restitution and quasi-contract. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding these remedies for both academic analysis and practical application in resolving contractual disputes.
Takeaways
Understanding remedies is essential for practical application.
Expectation damages aim to place the non-breaching party in the position they would have occupied.
Consequential damages must be foreseeable and communicated during contract formation.
The injured party has a duty to mitigate damages.
Specific performance is available when legal damages are inadequate.
Restitution prevents unjust enrichment and measures the value of benefits conferred.
Liquidated damages clauses are enforceable if they are a reasonable estimate of likely loss.
Limitations on recovery can arise from contract terms and procedural doctrines.
The landscape of contract remedies balances fairness and economic efficiency.
Mastery of remedies informs how we enforce, draft, negotiate, and litigate contracts.
contract law, remedies, damages, expectation damages, equitable relief, mitigation, restitution, quasi-contract, liquidated damages, breach of contract

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