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Jarvis v Swans Tours Ltd - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org

Damages for breach of contract is a common law remedy, available as of right. It is designed to compensate the victim for their actual loss as a result of the wrongdoer's breach rather than to punish the wrongdoer. If no loss has been occasioned by the plaintiff, only nominal damages will be awarded.

A victim will not necessarily recover every loss which flows from the breach by the defendant. In order to recover any damages, the losses suffered by the victim must be caused by the defendant, and not be too remote. Further, the plaintiff has a duty to mitigate his losses.


Video Measure of damages under English law



Amount of damages

The amount of damages a plaintiff would recover is usually measured at the 'loss of bargain' basis. For example,

  • Causation and Contributory Negligence
  • Remoteness
    • Timing of the assessment of damages

Maps Measure of damages under English law



Duty to mitigate

A plaintiff has a duty to mitigate damages and can not recover losses it could have avoided through reasonable efforts.


English Law: The Governing Law for International Contracts
src: www.qlts.com


Bases of assessment

There are three bases of assessment.

  • Expectation interest/loss of bargain. Expectation damages include:
    1. Benefit of bargain
    2. Lost profit
    3. Cost of cover
  • Reliance interest - interest created based on reliance on contract or promise.
  • Restitutionary interest

William Sindall plc v Cambridgeshire CC - Wikipedia
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Damages exceeding loss: extra-compensatory awards

Extra-compensatory damages in the form of nominal damages are the most venerable type of extra-compensatory damages, long established in our common law jurisprudence. Nominal damages are awarded where a legal wrong has been committed but no consequential loss has been caused. The purpose of the award is vindicatory - to mark the existence of the right in question and to mark the fact of its violation by the wrongdoer.

Source: Lord Scott


Competition Damages รข€
src: www.whitecase.com


Special classes of damages

Other than pecuniary damages, which is the most common type of damages recovered, there are a few other recognizable types damages under English law:

  • Injured feelings and disappointment
  • Injured reputation
  • Speculative damages
  • Liquidated damages and penalty
  • Quantum meruit
  • Exemplary or punitive damages

tort law book - Local Classifieds, Buy and Sell in the UK and ...
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See also

  • Damages

Attorney General v Blake - Wikipedia
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References


English Law: The Governing Law for International Contracts
src: www.qlts.com


External links

  • Worldlii links to resources on the subject of damages

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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