LAW 3010 REMEDIES FOR BREACH OF CONTRACT The usual remedy is damages – compensation for losses. Equitable remedies such as injunction may also be available. Damages Typically damages are designed to compensate for losses caused by breach of contract. An exception is punitive damages which will be addressed later. Damages seek to put the innocent party in the position that she would have been in if the other party had performed the contract. Damages may be pecuniary or non-pecuniary, that is financial loss or pain and emotional distress. The latter damages are unusual in contract but we will consider examples later. The test for recoverable damages is that of remoteness as laid down in the leading decision of 1854 in Hadley v. Baxendale (1854) 9 Exch. 341: (i) the damages must flow naturally from the breach of contract; or (ii) the damages, although difficult to predict in the ordinary case, were reasonably foreseeable because the unusual circumstances were communicated to the defendant. For damages to be ordered, one of the foregoing remoteness tests must be passed. This is to avoid unlimited liability. Information about unusual circumstances gives the parties the opportunity to turn down the offer, insure against the risk of breach and payment of higher than usual damages, or ask a higher price for performing the contract. In Hadley, delay of delivery of a part of a mill caused the mill to stop production, resulting in loss of money. The delivery company was not informed of the special circumstances so was not liable for the losses incurred by the delay. See also 1 Horne v. Midland Railway (1873) L.R. 8 C.P. 131 (C.P.) where defendants were one day late in delivery of shoes, but unaware in advance that the delay would prevent the plaintiff from selling the shoes at an unusually high price. Note that there would be liability for loss of ordinary profits but not for unusual profits. However, if the breaching party was informed in advance of the potential loss of unusual profits, he would be liable for such loss of profits, unless the contract contained a clear exemption clause. Non-pecuniary (general) damages The case Newell v. Canadian Pacific Airlines Ltd. (1976) O.R. (2d) 752 illustrates circumstances in which damages are paid for non-pecuniary losses due to breach of contract. The plaintiffs’ dogs were shipped to Mexico City in the plane’s cargo hold. One was found dead, the other comatose. The plaintiffs claimed damages for mental distress due to the loss of their pets. The court applied the Hadley test of foreseeability and found, in the circumstances, that it was foreseeable to both parties that the plaintiffs would be greatly distressed if harm befell their pets during transit. Damages of $500 were ordered by the courts. See also Jarvis v. Swan Tours Ltd. [1973] Q.B. 233 (C.A.) where damages were awarded for loss of enjoyment of a holiday due to the defendant’s breach of contract. Question. Is it appropriate for the courts to place a value on mental distress due to the loss of a pet arising from breach of contract? Is it possible to place an accurate monetary value on such distress? If not, does it matter if one cannot be sure of the monetary value of mental distress? What if a breach of contract leads to the loss of an infant child? Can a monetary value be assigned to such loss? If a plastic surgeon asserts that the new nose he will create for Eric or Anna will enhance their looks but it turns out to be hideous, and 2 distresses the recipient every time he or she looks in the mirror, should the courts award damages for such distress? What of the distress created for the bride when the hired photographer fails to turn up at the wedding ceremony to take pictures as contracted to do so? What if the bride and groom arrive at their honeymoon destination to find that the hotel paradise pictured and promised in the brochure is in fact a squalid dump infested with bed bugs? What of the student who enters a university due to the promise from the University’s advertisement brochures that she will enter an institution where she will be safe from harm and harassment, and provided with learning opportunities tailored specifically to her way of learning? If the university turns out to be unsafe and unable to tailor its teaching to individual learning methods, is there a breach of contract? If so, can damages be successfully sought for mental distress caused by the breach? Should such plaintiffs receive damages for disappointment, annoyance, frustration or distress? Why? The psychological contract is spoken of in employment relationships. Should a psychological contract be recognized in contractual relationships for the provision of such services? See the English case of Brian Horan who traveled from Banff Alberta to England in a cramped aircraft as part of a package holiday. See Keith McArthur, “Cramped Airline Passenger Wins Case” The Globe and Mail (18 April, 2002) at A1. The case applies only to package holidays and tours because conditions of airline passenger contracts are specified in the Warsaw Convention. Exemption clauses in that convention preclude liability of the airline for such discomfort etc. Pecuniary damages Pecuniary damages compensate monetary losses due to a breach of contract. These damages can be considered in three categories: (i) restitution; (ii) reliance; (iii) expectation. 3 Restitution An example of restitution damages is the return of money already paid by the innocent party to the party who breached the contract by not performing the act or service for which the money was paid. Reliance For example, a construction contractor may respond to an invitation by the University of Lethbridge to submit tenders to build a campus daycare facility. The tenderer may incur significant costs to submit the tender. The process of inviting tenders and submitting them gives rise to a contractual obligation on the part of the University to consider the tender. Even if the obligation is not explicit in the invitation to tender, it is implied. If the University negligently or intentionally fails to consider the tender, and the tender is submitted in accordance with the conditions stated in the invitation to tender, the construction contractor can sue for breach of contract. It will seek compensation for the costs incurred by it in creating the tender. This was done in reliance on the University’s meeting its contractual obligation to consider the tender. Even if the contractor would not have been selected to perform the work, it is entitled to damages for the costs incurred in creating and providing the tender. That is, compensation for the costs incurred “in reliance” on the other party’s performance of the contract. Expectation Most contracts involve expectations of both parties to benefit financially from the contract. Safeway contracts with a supplier to supply potatoes from which profits will be made. If the supplier fails to provide the potatoes as agreed, Safeway may lose the profit expected from the sale of the potatoes. Damages are payable for loss of expected profit caused by non-delivery of the potatoes (or incomplete delivery) in breach of contract. This is consistent with the courts’ principle of attempting to put the innocent party in the position he would have been in if the contract had not been breached. Compare this with tort, where damages seek to put the 4 innocent party in the position she would have been in prior to the tort being committed. Special and General Damages Damages for specific losses, such as the cost of getting another farmer to deliver higher priced potatoes are referred to as special damages. Damages to compensate mental distress are an example of general damages. Mitigation The innocent party must take reasonable steps to mitigate her loss from breach of contract. So a wrongfully dismissed employee must take reasonable steps to find alternative similar employment, and the retailer must seek an alternative source of potatoes to replace those not delivered. Failure to mitigate may cause a reduction in the award of damages. The innocent party need not take personal risks or incur unreasonable expense in order to mitigate loss. If reasonable attempts to mitigate loss do not bear fruit, the plaintiff will still have discharged her duty to mitigate loss. Liquidated Damages The contract may set the level of damages payable in the event of a breach. See Elite Bailiff Services Ltd. V. British Columbia (2003) 223 D.L.R. (4th) 39 (B.C.C.A.) p. 284 of text. Liability was limited to the cost of preparing the tender not loss of expected profit. Deposits can be a form of liquidated damages if the depositor fails to perform the contract. Note however, the invalidity of such a clause if the amount of liquidated damages is substantially excessive and is effectively a penalty not an estimate of damages incurred. See Meunier v. Cloutier (1984), 9 D.L.R. (4th) 486 (Ont. H.C.) (p. 285 of text), where the court found the liquidated damages to be a penalty not a reasonable estimate of damages for possible breach. See also H.F. Clarke Ltd. V. Thermidaire Corp. 5 Ltd. [1976] 1 S.C.R. 319 (S.C.C.) which found that liquidated damages must be “reasonable in the circumstances”. Equitable Remedies Specific performance The courts may on occasion order the performance of a contract in addition to or instead of awarding damages. Specific performance (SP) will not be awarded if it involves employment or provision of personal service by the defendant. Nor will courts award SP if it would require ongoing supervision. As it is an equitable remedy the plaintiff must come “with clean hands”. So the plaintiff must not have committed a breach of contract, or failed to seek the remedy within reasonable time. The courts will not award SP if it will cause hardship to the parties or a third party. Where it is awarded SP will such as grand masters’ paintings, or specific pieces of land. Sky Petroleum Ltd. v VIP Petroleum Ltd. [1974] 1 WLR 576. Injunction SP is an order to do something. Injunction is an order to refrain from doing something. Striking workers in breach of contract may be ordered to refrain from the strike. Injunction won’t be awarded if it harms a third party (see Island Properties v. Entertainment Enterprises) p. 288 of text or if damages will suffice. An interlocutory injunction may be awarded to stop a breach of contract prior to the matter being heard in court. 6