Excuses for Non-Performance: Conditions Following Contract Formation | Practical Law

Excuses for Non-Performance: Conditions Following Contract Formation | Practical Law

This Practice Note discusses excuses to perform contractual obligations that arise after a contract has been executed, including supervening events, impossibility, impracticability, frustration of purpose, failure of conditions, anticipatory repudiation, later agreements between the parties (such as modification, rescission, and accord and satisfaction), and waiver.

Excuses for Non-Performance: Conditions Following Contract Formation

Practical Law Practice Note 1-553-6307 (Approx. 16 pages)

Excuses for Non-Performance: Conditions Following Contract Formation

by Practical Law Commercial Transactions
MaintainedUSA (National/Federal)
This Practice Note discusses excuses to perform contractual obligations that arise after a contract has been executed, including supervening events, impossibility, impracticability, frustration of purpose, failure of conditions, anticipatory repudiation, later agreements between the parties (such as modification, rescission, and accord and satisfaction), and waiver.