Legal & IP
¿Qué es Breach of Contract?
Definición
A breach of contract occurs when one party to a valid agreement fails to fulfill their contractual obligations without a legally valid excuse. The non-breaching party may seek damages, specific performance, or contract rescission depending on the type and severity of the breach.
To establish breach of contract, a plaintiff must prove: (1) a valid contract existed (offer, acceptance, consideration, mutual assent, legal purpose); (2) the plaintiff performed their obligations or had a valid excuse; (3) the defendant failed to perform as required; and (4) the plaintiff suffered damages. Breaches are classified as material (substantial failure that defeats the contract's purpose — allowing the non-breaching party to treat the contract as terminated) or minor/partial (imperfect performance where the essential benefit is still delivered — only damages available). Anticipatory breach occurs when a party announces in advance they won't perform. Remedies include compensatory damages (restoring the plaintiff to their expected position), consequential damages (foreseeable losses flowing from the breach), specific performance (court order to complete the contract), and rescission.
Por qué es importante
Contract disputes are among the most common sources of business litigation. A business attorney can help you draft contracts with clear terms and remedies, assess whether a breach has occurred, and pursue or defend claims — often resolving through mediation or negotiated settlement without going to trial.