asked 90.9k views
5 votes
Behavior that strongly suggests that a party will not perform his obligations under a contract cannot ever be a material breach, because this would unfairly penalize a party who, after all, may later be able to perform.

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

The correct answer is false.

Step-by-step explanation:

contract law, a "material" rupture of agreement is a break (an inability to play out the agreement) that strikes so profoundly at the core of the agreement that it renders the understanding "unsalvageably broken" and invalidates the point of making the agreement in any case.

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User Acrobat
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