Contract Dispute -- Car Sales
Contract Dispute
The purpose of this essay is to review the field of contract regulations and laws as they relate to the termination of a contract. The matter discussed in this paper has to do with a change in the manufacturing specifics of car models available for purchase. A customer did not want to buy a car with a 5.9 liter V8 engine as he desires to be more conservation with fuel than this model would permit. The customer requests a vehicle with a 3.2 liter engine, and the sales contract is written accordingly. After the fact, both the car dealer and the consumer learn that the car is no longer available with a 3.2 liter engine or a 3.9 liter engine. In fact, all of the engines currently being manufactured for this model of car are 3.5 liter in size. A number of contract termination scenarios that apply to this case are described, several of which show definitive promise for resolving this sales contract problem.
Introduction
In the course of doing business according to terms that are agreed to in a written contract or agreement, circumstances may change that alter the value of the product being purchased, the match between the expectations of the consumer and the purchased product, or that render the contract valueless. Although these circumstances are not especially commonplace, they are sufficiently frequent so as to establish components of contracts and agreements that include termination clauses. Several types of contract termination clauses are discussed in this paper with respect to the discrepancy in engine size of a car that is to be purchased by Josh Hartly through his local car dealer. The matter at hand is that engines in the size specified by Hartly and noted in the contract (3.2 liter V6) are no longer being manufactured, having been replaced by 3.5 liter engines.
Rescinding or Terminating the Contract
In the matter concerning the specific engine size of a vehicle ordered in response to a sales contract,...
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