Customers Pricing Contact Sales

Breach of Contract

Definition

A legal claim and category of civil wrong known as “breach of contract” refers to when one or more of the parties to a contract refuses to perform their obligations under the terms of the agreement or interfere with the other party’s performance. When a party violates one or more of its responsibilities, in whole or in part, as stated in the agreement, expresses a desire to violate the debt, or otherwise shows signs of being unable to fulfill the obligation. Should a contract be broken, the party who violated the agreement must reimburse the wronged party for any damages.

Understanding Breach of Contract

A breach of contract occurs when a promise that is a contract component is not kept without a valid justification. This includes failing to perform satisfactorily satisfying any express or implicit promise, including the implied warranty of merchantability or industry standards. A court will typically hear a contract case where one or both parties allege that the terms of the agreement have been broken.

The following inquiries must be addressed by the judge when a party asserts a violation of contract:

  1. Was a contract there?
  2. If yes, what did the agreement demand of each party?
  3. Was there ever a change to the contract?
  4. Did the alleged contract breach happen?
  5. If so, was the violation of the agreement material?
  6. Does the violating party have a legal justification for resisting contract enforcement?
  7. What losses resulted from the breach?

Types of Contract Breaches

A contract violation could be seen as either small or significant. When you don’t get an item or service before the due date, that is considered a “”small breach.”” Take a suit that you want your tailor to custom-fit. The tailor makes an oral agreement (a promise) that they would bring the altered item in time for your effective presentation, but they deliver it the next day.

When you experience something other than what was promised in the contract, this is referred to as a “”material breach.”” Let’s take the example of your company hiring a vendor to send 200 copies of a bound manual to a convention for the auto sector. However, when the boxes get to the conference location, they are filled with gardening brochures.

Additionally, a breach of contract typically falls into one of two categories: an “”actual breach,”” which occurs when one party refuses to adhere strictly to the agreement’s requirements, or an “”anticipatory breach,”” which occurs when one side informs the other in advance that they will not be fulfilling the obligations under the contract.

The unique strategies they use during auctions help us achieve real cost reductions that aren’t always possible through face-to-face negotiations.

Naveen Nanda
Senior GM Procurement,
Havells
Havells Logo

We integrated Procol with SAP, and it brought complete transparency to our procurement. Everything from PR to PO is now tracked, saving us 30–40% of time and costs.

Rahul Wadhwa
Head of Strategic Sourcing, Signature Global
Signature global logo

After implementing Procol, the user experience is way better than it used to be. The cost is also much lower compared to other competitors in the market.

Rohan Gosh
Strategic Sourcing Manager, Emami
Emami Logo

It’s super user-friendly, helps us reduce manual work, speeds up decision-making, and allows us to access all our procurement data anytime from one place.

Elango Srinivasan
Chief Financial Officer,
India Nippon Electricals Limited
india nippon
Trusted by leading procurement teams worldwide
Get a Free Demo

We’d love to hear from you. Please fill out this form to schedule a demo with us, or call us on +1 315-645-2799

Privacy Overview
Procol Official Logo

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you browse. Cookies that are categorised as strictly necessary are stored on your browser - they are essential for the basic features of the website to work correctly and cannot be switched off.

We also use third-party cookies that help us analyse how you use the site, track your preferences, and deliver advertising that may be relevant to you. These cookies will only be stored in your browser with your consent - you are free to opt out at any time by adjusting your settings below.

Opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience on our site. For full details on every cookie we use and how we handle your data, please read our Privacy Policy.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

These cookies are essential for the website to function correctly. They cannot be switched off as they are set in response to actions you take, such as setting your privacy preferences. No personally identifiable information is stored.

Analytics Cookies

These cookies help us understand how visitors interact with our website - which pages are visited, how long users stay, and where they come from. All data is aggregated and anonymous. Enabling these helps us improve our content and user experience.

Advertising Cookies

These cookies are used to show you ads that are more relevant to your interests, both on and off our website. They track your activity across sites to build a profile of your preferences. We do not sell your data, these cookies are managed by our advertising partners.