Contracts/Impossibility: Difference between revisions

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The [[England|English]] case that established this doctrine at [[common law]] is ''[[Taylor v. Caldwell]].''
The [[England|English]] case that established this doctrine at [[common law]] is ''[[Taylor v. Caldwell]].''
Everything is impossible without God.
Anything is possible with God.
Impossible is trying to live without God.
For life without God is death.


==Related to science==
==Related to science==

Revision as of 19:29, November 10, 2008

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In contract law, impossibility is an excuse for the nonperformance of duties under a contract, based on a change in circumstances (or the discovery of preexisting circumstances), the nonoccurrence of which was an underlying assumption of the contract, that makes performance of the contract literally impossible. For such a defense to be raised, performance must not merely be difficult or unexpectedly costly for one party; there must be no way for it to actually be accomplished.

For example, if Rachel contracts to pay Joey $1000 to paint her house on October 1, but the house burns to the ground before the end of September, Rachel is excused from her duty to pay Joey the $1000, and he is excused from his duty to paint her house; however, Joey may still be able to sue for the unjust enrichment of any benefit conferred on Rachel before her house burned down.

The English case that established this doctrine at common law is Taylor v. Caldwell.

Everything is impossible without God.

Anything is possible with God.

Impossible is trying to live without God.

For life without God is death.


Related to science

  • Impossibility by John D. Barrow ©1998 ISBN 0-09-977211-6 - Investigates the limits of science and the science of limits.

See also

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