It Stands for
Landmark cases
Damages
Remedies
Types of breach
100

UCC

Uniform Commercial Code

100

The Russian Supreme Court ruled against the singer, ordering her to return her Moscow apartment to the legal buyer ending a high-profile "scam saga". The singer had previously regained the property by claiming she was pressured by fraudsters. It turned out that she held both the property and the sale funds.

Dolina v Lurie

100

Monetary compensation for losses not capable of precise calculation at the time of breach

General damages

100

A court order forcing a party to do or stop doing something

Injunction

100

This is a serious violation that goes to the "root" of the agreement, substantially impacting the benefits the innocent party expected.

Material breach

200

IRS

Internal Revenue Service

200

The case was used by lobbyists to push for tort reform—laws that limit the amount of money people can win in lawsuits against corporations. After long trials the judge awarded $2.7M in damages, but the appellate court reduced the punitive damages to $480,000 for gross negligence, but it is known that the parties settled the monetary compensation out of court afterwards.

Liebeck v McDonalds

200

This compensation requires the breach to constitute a separate, intentional tort

Punitive damages

200

An equitable remedy in contract law where a court orders a party to perform their specific contractual obligations rather than pay monetary damages.

Specific performance

200

This is a failure to perform a contractual obligation that does not destroy the contract's core purpose.

Minor breach

300

LLP

Limited Liability Partnership

300

The court established that negligence is only actionable if the plaintiff is a foreseeable victim within the "zone of danger". The court held that defendants are not liable for unforeseeable consequences, dismissing claims by a passenger hit by falling scales after a distant explosion.

Palsgraf v Railroad

300

Pre-agreed, fixed sums payable by a party for specific breaches of contract, such as delays, designed to provide certainty and avoid proving actual losses.

Liquidated damages

300

A remedy designed to reverse a defendant's unjust enrichment by restoring benefits they received at the claimant's expense

Restitution

300

It occurs when one party fails to perform an essential obligation, causing substantial detriment that deprives the innocent party of the contract's core benefit.

Fundamental breach

400

EGM

Extraordinary General Meeting

400

The court confirmed that damages for non-pecuniary losses—specifically distress, inconvenience, and loss of amenity—are recoverable in contract law when a major object of the contract was to provide pleasure, relaxation, or peace of mind.

Farley v Skinner

400

Monetary compensation in contract law designed to restore the non-breaching party to the financial position they occupied before the contract was made.

Reliance damages

400

This remedy constitutes the discharge of a contract, freeing parties from future unaccrued obligations

Termination

400

It occurs when one party to a contract explicitly communicates or demonstrates through actions that they will not fulfill their contractual obligations before the performance is actually due.

Anticipatory breach

500

HMRC

HM Revenue & Customs

500

The case is a landmark legal precedent establishing that a contract clause is a penalty if it is "extravagant and unconscionable" compared to the greatest possible loss, rather than a genuine pre-estimate of loss.

Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage & Motor Co Ltd

500

This rule in contract law limits recoverable damages to those that were reasonably contemplated by both parties at the time of contract formation.

Foreseeability rule

500

Remedies available under sale of goods legislation

Right to reject or return or replace or repair goods

500

Detect type of breach: A construction contractor hired to renovate a house sells all their heavy machinery and closes their office before the project starts, signaling they cannot complete the job.

Anticipatory breach