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Full-Text Articles in Contracts
After Frustration: Three Cheers For Chandler V. Webster, Victor P. Goldberg
After Frustration: Three Cheers For Chandler V. Webster, Victor P. Goldberg
Washington and Lee Law Review
Performance of a contract can be excused by a number of circumstances, notably impossibility, impracticability, and frustration. When performance is excused there remains the question of how to treat any payments or expenditures that were made prior to the occurrence of the contract-frustrating event. In Chandler v. Webster, the English courts decided over a century ago that the parties should be left where they were at the time of the frustrating event. Forty years later that holding was overturned so that now recovery might be had both for restitution of payments made prior to the event and for expenditures made …
Filling In The Blank: Defining Breaches Of Contract Excepted From Discharge As Willful And Malicious Injuries To Property Under 11i U.S.C. § 523(A)(6), Bryan Hoynak
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.