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  2. Breach of contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breach_of_contract

    Any breach of contract (warranty, condition or innominate term) gives rise to a right in the hands of the innocent party to recover their damage suffered which caused by the breach of contract by the defaulting party. Damages in the UK are the only [4] remedy available for breach of a warranty.

  3. Legal liability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_liability

    A limited liability form separates the owner(s) from the business. The limited liability form essentially acts as a corporate veil that protects owners from liabilities of the business. [2] This means that when a business is found liable in a case, the owners are not themselves liable; rather, the business is.

  4. Legal liability of certified public accountants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_liability_of...

    Privity: CPAs and their clients enter into a contract with an agreement to perform certain services. Liability occurs when there is a breach of contract. [2] This applies to the CPA if they don’t perform what they stated in the engagement letter and the client suffers damages. Professional negligence: Negligence may be viewed as “failure to ...

  5. Measure of damages under English law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measure_of_damages_under...

    Damages for breach of contract is a common law remedy, available as of right. [1] 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.

  6. Contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract

    A term is a condition (rather than an intermediate or innominate term, or a warranty), in any of the following five situations: (1) statute explicitly classifies the term in this way; (2) there is a binding judicial decision supporting this classification of a particular term as a "condition"; (3) a term is described in the contract as a ...

  7. Indemnity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indemnity

    When a contract is not negotiable (adhesion contract), the wording often lets the indemnitee decide what to spend on legal costs and bill the indemnitor. [29] Most clauses are quite broad. [29] [30] The following are examples of indemnity requirements from a range of businesses. The last one, Angie's List, limits issues to the user's fault, but ...

  8. Professional liability insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_liability...

    Professional liability insurance coverage usually does not include defamation (libel and slander), breach of contract, breach of warranty, intellectual property, personal injury, security, [clarification needed] and cost of contract. [clarification needed] Coverage can often be added to provide indemnity "for any civil liability".

  9. Expectation damages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expectation_damages

    Expectation damages are damages recoverable from a breach of contract by the non-breaching party. An award of expectation damages protects the injured party's interest in realising the value of the expectancy that was created by the promise of the other party.

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