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{{ContractLaw}}
{{ContractLaw}}


'''Efficient breach''' refers to a [[breach of contract]] that the breaching party considers desirable even when the [[contract law|legal]] and [[economics|economic]] ramifications of such a breach are considered.
'''Efficient breach''' refers to an intentional [[breach of contract]] and payment of damages by a party who would incur greater economic loss by performing under the contract.


The first statement of the theory of efficient breach appears to have been made in a law review article by Robert Birmingham, Breach of Contract, Damage Measures, and Economic Efficiency, 24 Rutgers L.Rev. 273, 284 (1970) (“Repudiation of obligations should be encouraged where the promisor is able to profit from his default after placing his promisee in as good a position as he would have occupied had performance been rendered”). The theory was named by Charles Goetz and Robert Scott, Liquidated Damages, Penalties, and the Just Compensation Principle: A Theory of Efficient Breach, 77 Colum.L.Rev. 554 (1977).
== Development of Efficient Breach Theory ==
 
According to Black's Law Dictionary, efficient breach theory is "the view that a party should be allowed to breach a contract and pay damages, if doing so would be more economically efficient than performing under the contract."
 
The first statement of the theory of efficient breach appears to have been made in a law review article by Robert Birmingham in "Breach of Contract, Damage Measures, and Economic Efficiency, 24 Rutgers L.Rev. 273, 284 (1970) (“Repudiation of obligations should be encouraged where the promisor is able to profit from his default after placing his promisee in as good a position as he would have occupied had performance been rendered”). The theory was named by Charles Goetz and Robert Scott, Liquidated Damages, Penalties, and the Just Compensation Principle: A Theory of Efficient Breach, 77 Colum.L.Rev. 554 (1977).


Efficient Breach Theory is associated with [[Richard Posner]] and the [[Law and Economics]] school of thought.  It has been used to defend the traditional [[Common_Law|common law]] rule that a [[tort|non-tortious]] breach of contract cannot be [[remedy (law)|remedied]] by [[Punitive_damages|punitive damages]] and [[penal damages]] (unreasonably excessive [[Liquidated_damages|liquidated damages]] that are seen as a <i>punishment</i> for breach rather than a remedy).  Such penalties would discourage efficient breach (therefore discouraging efficient behavior) and possibly put companies at increased risk of bankruptcy, which would be very bad for society.  Posner explains his views in his majority opinion in <i>Lake River Corp. v. Carborundum Co.</i>, 769 F.2d 1284 (7th Cir. 1985).
Efficient Breach Theory is associated with [[Richard Posner]] and the [[Law and Economics]] school of thought.  It has been used to defend the traditional [[Common_Law|common law]] rule that a [[tort|non-tortious]] breach of contract cannot be [[remedy (law)|remedied]] by [[Punitive_damages|punitive damages]] and [[penal damages]] (unreasonably excessive [[Liquidated_damages|liquidated damages]] that are seen as a <i>punishment</i> for breach rather than a remedy).  Such penalties would discourage efficient breach (therefore discouraging efficient behavior) and possibly put companies at increased risk of bankruptcy, which would be very bad for society.  Posner explains his views in his majority opinion in <i>Lake River Corp. v. Carborundum Co.</i>, 769 F.2d 1284 (7th Cir. 1985).


The theory of efficient breach is that such an action can result in an outcome that benefits the breaching party and society as a whole.   To illustrate, suppose I contract to sell you a ton of bricks for $1,000. We sign the contract, and then a third party comes along and offers me $1,500 for that same ton (maybe he needs them more urgently). One might say that morally, I am obligated to sell you the bricks because I am bound by my promise. See, for example, [[Charles_Fried|Charles Fried's]] "Contract as Promise." Posner would say no -- I could choose to sell the other person the bricksIf you already paid me, I would have to refund you the $1,000If it costs you $1,100 to get replacement bricks, and $100 because of the delay in getting the replacement (e.g., your workers don't have bricks to use but you still have to pay their salaries), you would also be entitled to collect $200 from meThis is known as the [[Expectation damages (law)|expectation interest]] because it puts you in as good a position as if I had performed the contract (if I had delivered the bricks when I said I would). Society is better off on net by at least $300, because I am better off by $300, whomever I sold the bricks to is better off, and no one is worse off.
== Posner's Illustration of Efficient Breach ==
 
Judge Richard Posner gave this well-known illustration of efficient breach in "Economic Analysis of Law":
<blockquote>
Suppose I sign a contract to deliver 100,000 custom-ground widgets at $.10 apiece to A, for use in his boiler factory.  After I have delivered 10,000, B comes to me, explains that he desperately needs 25,000 custom-ground widgets at once since otherwise he will be forced to close his pianola factory at great cost, and offers me $.15 apiece for 25,000 widgets. I sell him the widgets and as a result do not complete timely delivery to A, who sustains $1000 in damages from my breachHaving obtained an additional profit of $1250 on the sale to B, I am better off even after reimbursing A for his loss.  Society is also better off.  Since B was willing to pay me $.15 per widget, it must mean that each widget was worth at least $.15 to himBut it was worth only $.14 to A -- $.10, what he paid, plus $.04 ($1000 divided by 25,000), his expected profitThus the breach resulted in a transfer of the 26,000 widgets from a lower valued to a higher valued use.
</blockquote>
 
== Criticism of Efficient Breach ==


Efficient breach is not a [[defense (law)|legal defense]] to a [[lawsuit|suit]] for breach of contract.  If there is no defense, the breaching party must pay damages to the non-breaching party, such as the expectation interest described above.
Some have argued that morally, A is obligated to honor a contract made with B because A has made a promise. (See, for example, [[Charles_Fried|Charles Fried's]] "Contract as Promise.")(“The moralist of duty thus posits a general obligation to keep promises, of which the obligation of contract will only be a special case – that special case in which certain promises have attained legal as well as moral force.”)




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Revision as of 21:25, November 27, 2007

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Efficient breach refers to an intentional breach of contract and payment of damages by a party who would incur greater economic loss by performing under the contract.

Development of Efficient Breach Theory

According to Black's Law Dictionary, efficient breach theory is "the view that a party should be allowed to breach a contract and pay damages, if doing so would be more economically efficient than performing under the contract."

The first statement of the theory of efficient breach appears to have been made in a law review article by Robert Birmingham in "Breach of Contract, Damage Measures, and Economic Efficiency, 24 Rutgers L.Rev. 273, 284 (1970) (“Repudiation of obligations should be encouraged where the promisor is able to profit from his default after placing his promisee in as good a position as he would have occupied had performance been rendered”). The theory was named by Charles Goetz and Robert Scott, Liquidated Damages, Penalties, and the Just Compensation Principle: A Theory of Efficient Breach, 77 Colum.L.Rev. 554 (1977).

Efficient Breach Theory is associated with Richard Posner and the Law and Economics school of thought. It has been used to defend the traditional common law rule that a non-tortious breach of contract cannot be remedied by punitive damages and penal damages (unreasonably excessive liquidated damages that are seen as a punishment for breach rather than a remedy). Such penalties would discourage efficient breach (therefore discouraging efficient behavior) and possibly put companies at increased risk of bankruptcy, which would be very bad for society. Posner explains his views in his majority opinion in Lake River Corp. v. Carborundum Co., 769 F.2d 1284 (7th Cir. 1985).

Posner's Illustration of Efficient Breach

Judge Richard Posner gave this well-known illustration of efficient breach in "Economic Analysis of Law":

Suppose I sign a contract to deliver 100,000 custom-ground widgets at $.10 apiece to A, for use in his boiler factory. After I have delivered 10,000, B comes to me, explains that he desperately needs 25,000 custom-ground widgets at once since otherwise he will be forced to close his pianola factory at great cost, and offers me $.15 apiece for 25,000 widgets. I sell him the widgets and as a result do not complete timely delivery to A, who sustains $1000 in damages from my breach. Having obtained an additional profit of $1250 on the sale to B, I am better off even after reimbursing A for his loss. Society is also better off. Since B was willing to pay me $.15 per widget, it must mean that each widget was worth at least $.15 to him. But it was worth only $.14 to A -- $.10, what he paid, plus $.04 ($1000 divided by 25,000), his expected profit. Thus the breach resulted in a transfer of the 26,000 widgets from a lower valued to a higher valued use.

Criticism of Efficient Breach

Some have argued that morally, A is obligated to honor a contract made with B because A has made a promise. (See, for example, Charles Fried's "Contract as Promise.")(“The moralist of duty thus posits a general obligation to keep promises, of which the obligation of contract will only be a special case – that special case in which certain promises have attained legal as well as moral force.”)


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