38 | © 2019 Themi s Bar Revi ew, LLC | MBE Contracts and Sal es
Example 144: I contract with Brooks Brothers to buy “100 white dress shirts for
$10,000.” Brooks calls to tell me that the shirts are ready, and I can pick them
up at the store when I like. That night, the store burns down, and my shirts are
destroyed. Do I have to pay for them? ________. (In this risk of loss problem,
you continue to the last step in analysis. Seller is a merchant. Therefore, the
risk of loss stays with the seller.)
Example 145: Professor Geis contracts with the law school bookstore to sell 10
used copies of his book for $10 each. He tells the bookstore manager that he
has left the books outside his office, so she can get them whenever. That night,
a pack of law-review editors steals and burns all of the books. Does the
bookstore have to pay for them? _________. (Again, you go through all the
steps. Because Professor Geis is not a merchant, the risk of loss moves to the
buyer and the bookstore has to pay for the books.)
CHAPTER 15: EXCUSES
A. Excuses—The “E” in “Pizza With Crawling Escargot”
• There is a contract, but something has happened to prevent one side from having to perform.
1. Impossibility and Impracticability
o Look for these common fact patterns:
Performance becomes ________________________ after the contract is formed;
The subject matter of the contract is __________________________; or
In a services contract with a “special person,” the performing party
__________________ or is incapacitated.
o BUT, something that just makes performance more expensive than expected will not
normally excuse performance.
o Look for something that hinders the ability to perform, not just the cost to perform.
Example 146: Mickey contracts with a local tavern, The Whisky Jar, to bartend
for one year in exchange for free drinks. If “Prohibition II” is passed, outlawing
alcohol consumption in Virginia, must Mickey perform this contract? ________.
Example 147: Yo u contract to reroof my house for $10,000, but before you can
perform, my house burns down. I insist that our contract requires you to rebuild
my house and then reroof it. Am I right? __________.
Example 148: You contract to dig a wine cellar for me for $10,000. After you
start performing, you hit some big rocks and realize that it will cost you twice as
much to finish the job, resulting in a loss on the contract. Are you excused from
performing? ____________________________________________________.