What happens to a contract if one of the parties fails to meet their obligation?

A breach of contract occurs when two or more people enter into an agreement, and at least one party does not fulfill their part of the contract by failing to meet the contract terms without a legal excuse. Once all parties reach an agreement, each one is under a contractual obligation, making the contract legally enforceable.

Managing your firm’s contracts is often difficult, so it is possible to breach a contract without realizing it. Contracts are growing more complex, leading to accidental breaches, such as missing a deadline, sending the wrong product, sending a damaged product, or submitting the incorrect payment.   

For instance, your business may have different departments for coding and delivering software. If these departments are in different locations (possibly even different states), you could experience confusion over who has the correct contract with the terms of delivery dates. If you miss a delivery deadline, then you have breached the contract. 

When entering into a legal agreement, parties will often include the consequences of the breach of contract within the contract itself. For example, one party may pay a 10% penalty or a $500 fine for a breach. Other consequences could be more creative, like a party providing you extra technical support if they delivered software to you late. 

If a breach occurs, you and the other parties may come together and create a new contract or a solution to the breach. If a new agreement fails to materialize, the next course of action is to appear in court or arbitration. 

The most common remedies for breach of contract are:

  • Damages—can be actual or punitive if bad faith is involved
  • ‌Specific performance—ordering a party to fulfill the contract  
  • ‌Canceling the agreement with a return of any benefits received 

Just as there is a wide array of contract formats, there are also various ways to breach them. Here are some of the most common types of breaches of contract and what follows the breach:

Minor 

With a minor breach, one party delivers the goods and services, but not on time. A serious problem occurs if a contract specifies “time is of the essence,” and you miss the deadline. The general solution to this breach is delivering on the original agreement and paying back any damages caused by the delay.

Material 

In a material breach, one party violates a significant term of the contract. The broken part must be at the heart of the contract and irreparably break the contract. For example, perhaps you ordered reams of paper and received boxes of staplers instead. In this case, the other party could have ignored the contract altogether, sending you different items than what was agreed upon. 

Anticipatory 

An anticipatory breach occurs when one party knows in advance that they will not fulfill their part of the contract. In such cases, the other party doesn’t have to take any other actions under the contract. The breaching party has to pay for any damages caused by this type of breach. 

Actual 

An actual breach is when one party completely fails to meet the terms of the contract. If you are the other party, then you decide what course is best for your business:

  • Use the remedy written into the contract
  • ‌Agree to create a new contract
  • ‌Go to arbitration or mediation
  • ‌Bring the matter to court and sue for damages
  • ‌Cut your losses and learn from the bad experience‌

Mutual 

There may be times when both parties want to breach the contract. For example, if the underlying markets change substantially, or the companies find themselves in changed circumstances, all parties may choose to create a new contract and void the old one.  In a case like this, a contract breach is desirable to everyone.

From the cookie policy you agree to on every website to the terms of sale when you go shopping, we enter into contracts daily. But your business creates and negotiates many more contracts than that, and keeping track of them is a challenging task. The lack of a proper contract management system can directly lead to why breaches of contract occur.

Piles of contracts

Where are they? Are they in file drawers? Are they on different computers and in different formats? Keeping track of contracts is difficult. Making sure that you don’t breach the contract—or the other party doesn’t breach—requires finding the contract first.

Every department handles contracts differently

When you look at the contracts, you’ll see that each department writes its part differently. For example, perhaps one department meant for their terms to mean the same thing as another department, but that intention failed to make it onto a page. One department may have created its spreadsheet system for the contracts and archived the original copies. Without a secure contract management system utilized by all departments, you could breach a contract and not even know it. 

Different types of contracts

Your firm needs to organize and keep track of many different contracts for various products, whether you are the producer or consumer. These contracts include orders for material goods (paper and ink) and services (janitorial and an outside accountant). Following that, computer contracts for software vary— you may purchase software to use for a year or to own forever. Just visiting a website often involves a couple more contracts. And then you have the contracts that your company needs to perform on. To avoid a breach, you need a system to stay on top of all agreed-upon terms and deadlines.

‌Staying on top of all your obligations isn’t easy. You need to manage the dates, goals, and specifics of all the contracts in your system, whatever side of the contract you are on. Nobody wants to end up in court, but breaches may push you there. 

Ironclad’s digital contract management provides a solution for integrating contracts (and breaches of contract) into your everyday business flow. This software can help avoid breaches by giving you a unified and centralized way to keep and use all your contracts, their dates, and penalties. It keeps track of contracts over their entire lifecycle, and its automation keeps things moving forward.

Centralized

All contracts are in one place—your contract management software. Everyone can check on the contracts that affect them. For instance, one department may need contracts ordered in a list by the due date. Another department can pull up all the contracts with the same vendor. Your firm can have one authentic copy of the contract without the fear of losing it.

Lifecycle

More than simply recording contracts, Ironclad’s program covers the lifecycle of contracts. Old ones can guide the creation of new ones. You can handle negotiations online with documents that everyone can use. Every person involved can receive reminders of events and due dates.

Automated 

From negotiation to fulfillment, artificial intelligence will guide your office through the steps needed.  Automation helps to keep track of potential breaches. The system notifies each party who needs to take action. Each party can checkmark their activity as “completed” and leave notes to alert Legal on any changes. Then, the contract moves on to the next party.  Once completed, the system learns from your successes and suggests those terms for the next contract. 

A digital contract works differently than a paper contract. It allows people to work together in an organized way with an accessible signature collection. It stores contracts but allows past contracts to come back to inform future ones. 

Collaborative problem solving

Ironclad’s software creates a chain that links all emails and documents related to the contract—all in native DocX form. This way, all parties can visit the documents in the Cloud while redlining and collaboratively editing contracts. When a party breaches a contract, you can find solutions that work well for everyone. Contract management keeps track of all notes and changes and even suggests several clauses that have been pre-approved by Legal.

Workflow designer

The workflow designer makes it clear who has the contract now and who has the next step. All the stakeholders can add comments as you negotiate the breach. (And you will know who is behind and how much you can work around their tardiness.) Compliance becomes automatic and is worked into your daily practices over time.

Clickwrap digital signatures

Ironclad Clickwrap creates an easy way to gather everyone’s signatures. A single click becomes a legal signature. Even better, this entire mechanism is available to your clients, partners, and contractors on your website.

Dynamic data repository

Every contract is stored for posterity in a secure space, so now each party can look at the same authoritative document. In addition, contract data can be used as data themselves—helping you generate new contracts, see past trends, and solve problems before they happen.

Contract lifecycle management with Ironclad saves time while reducing your exposure to risks. It makes keeping up with a variety of contracts more accessible. When you fulfill all your contracts, your business reputation improves. Your contracts and deadlines are available to you at any time. You can quickly check the consequences if you or your supplier miss a deadline or breach a contract. Contract management brings a future with fewer breaches of contract.

Table of contents

What happens when a party has failed to perform his contractual obligations?

A breach of contract occurs when one party in a binding agreement fails to deliver according to the terms of the agreement. A breach of contract can happen in both a written and an oral contract. The parties involved in a breach of contract may resolve the issue among themselves, or in a court of law.

What would happen if one party breaks the contract?

Under the law, once a contract is breached, the guilty party must remedy the breach. The primary solutions are damages, specific performance, or contract cancellation and restitution. Compensatory damages: The goal with compensatory damages is to make the non-breaching party whole as if the breach never happened.

What happens if the terms of a contract are not met?

When the terms of a contract are not met, it is considered a breach of contract and the injured party can then file a lawsuit.

What happens if there is a breach of contract?

When a breach of contract occurs or is alleged, one or both of the parties may wish to have the contract enforced on its terms, or may try to recover for any financial harm caused by the alleged breach. If a dispute over a contract arises and informal attempts at resolution fail, the most common next step is a lawsuit.