Contractual Force Majeure-based Provision

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A Contractual Force Majeure-based Provision is a contractual provision that addresses the consequences of extraordinary events or circumstances beyond the control of the contract parties that prevent or hinder performance under the contract.



References

2024

  • (ChatGPT-OpenAI, 2024) ⇒ Prompt: Summarize the concept Force Majeure in 1- 2 paragraphs. ChatGPT (model:gpt-4o). Retrieved: 2024-08-10.
    • QUOTE: Force Majeure, a term derived from French meaning "superior force," refers to a contractual clause that frees parties from liability or obligation when an extraordinary event or circumstance beyond their control prevents them from fulfilling their contractual duties. Common events that might trigger a force majeure clause include natural disasters (like earthquakes, floods, hurricanes), wars, strikes, epidemics, or government actions. This clause is meant to protect parties from the unforeseen and unavoidable, essentially acknowledging that certain extreme disruptions can render the performance of contractual duties impractical, impossible, or inadvisable.

      In practice, a force majeure clause typically specifies the types of events considered to be force majeure and outlines the procedure for invoking the clause, such as providing timely notice. The key principles revolve around causation, where the event must directly impede the performance of contractual obligations, and unpredictability, where the event could not have been reasonably foreseen or mitigated. By including a force majeure clause, contractual parties aim to allocate risk and define the boundaries of liability and responsibility in exceptional circumstances.

2024b

  • (Cornell Law School, 2024) ⇒ https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/force_majeure Retrieved: 2024-08-10.
    • QUOTE: Force majeure is a provision in a contract that frees both parties from obligation if an extraordinary event directly prevents one or both parties from performing. A non-performing party may use a force majeure clause as an excuse for non-performance for circumstances beyond the party's control and not due to any fault or negligence by the non-performing party. However, mere impracticality or unanticipated difficulty is not enough to excuse performance. Indeed, courts generally do not recognize an economic downturn as a force majeure event. This is because economic hardships occur regularly in business and, as a result, may be appropriately and preemptively dealt with by allocating its risk through the terms of the contract. As such, force majeure events are often labeled as "acts of god" and include both natural and man-made events like fires, floods, storms, war, and labor disputes.

2024c

  • (Hargrave et al., 2024) ⇒ Marshall Hargrave, Khadija Khartit, and Suzanne Kvilhaug (2024). ["What Is a Force Majeure Contract Clause?"].In: Investopedia - Business, Business Jargon.