Abstract
Among default remedies for breach of contract, expectation damages are believed superior to property rules such as specific performance since they allow the promisor to breach inefficient contracts when renegotiation is economically infeasible. We examine whether the promisor's ability to accurately determine when to breach is maintained when taking into account the value of time that distinguishes between immediate performance and paying damages in court. We show that if prejudgment interest does not equal the promisor's subjective value from time (e.g. if the court uses the promisee's interest rate to fully compensate him), the promisor's breach decision will be distorted. When renegotiation is feasible this problem of excessive breach is mitigated, however asymmetric information about discount factors can lead to a renegotiation process that is doomed to fail. Punitive damages behave similarly. Specific performance without ancillary monetary awards always creates a pie for division between the parties. Ancillary awards for delay are unlikely to change this, but ancillary awards for partial breach make specific performance behave more like expectation damages, although to a lesser degree.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 13-25 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | International Review of Law and Economics |
Volume | 35 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 2013 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This paper is an extension of Osnat Jacobi's Ph.D. thesis written at the Law Faculty at Bar-Ilan University in 2009 under the supervision of Shahar Lifshitz and Avi Weiss. Osnat Jacobi thanks Shahar Lifshitz for his guidance; ideas and inspiration; and the Bar-Ilan University President's Scholarship Fund for financial support. Both authors thank Oren Bar-Gill; Dennis W. Carlton; Kobi Nussim; Gideon Parchomovsky; Alan Schwartz the referees and the editor for valuable comments; and the Adar Foundation at the Department of Economics in Bar-Ilan University for financial support.
Funding
This paper is an extension of Osnat Jacobi's Ph.D. thesis written at the Law Faculty at Bar-Ilan University in 2009 under the supervision of Shahar Lifshitz and Avi Weiss. Osnat Jacobi thanks Shahar Lifshitz for his guidance; ideas and inspiration; and the Bar-Ilan University President's Scholarship Fund for financial support. Both authors thank Oren Bar-Gill; Dennis W. Carlton; Kobi Nussim; Gideon Parchomovsky; Alan Schwartz the referees and the editor for valuable comments; and the Adar Foundation at the Department of Economics in Bar-Ilan University for financial support.
Funders | Funder number |
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Department of Economics in Bar-Ilan University | |
ADA Foundation |
Keywords
- Breach of contract
- Contract law
- Default remedies
- Discount factor
- Expectation damages
- Prejudgment interest
- Punitive damages
- Renegotiation costs
- Specific performance