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The first and paramount task of international commercial contracts is organizing the relationship between the parties in an optimal manner. This means that contracts must determine the rights and duties of the parties so that the transaction works smoothly and its costs can be minimized. A second important task is providing remedies for cases of breach of contract. Requirements as to the rules for such contracts, as well as to the contracts themselves, have to be assessed in light of these aims. The attainment of the first goal is mainly a task of the parties in drafting their individual contracts, but nevertheless may be supported by the applicable rules, as the UNIDROIT Principles do in Chapter 6, Section 1 (Performance in General). Though the parties to a contract very often deal with the consequences of breaches of contract as well, they rely more often on the applicable rules. It is easier for parties to organize their relationship than to deal with its destruction. 32
Remedies available to a party are a key consideration for that party, particularly if the contract is breached. However, the issue of remedies is one of the areas in which the diversity of legal systems is obvious. 33 During the drafting of the Convention the most difficult to formulate were those dealing with the remedies of buyer and seller for breach of contract by the other party, which are still among the most likely to generate controversy. Many aspects of the law of sales reflect merchant practice, and to the extent that this practice is standardized in international sales transactions, the problems in formulating the text of the Draft Convention were reduced. However the provisions in respect of breach of contract do not reflect merchant practice. They reflect the efforts of lawyers from many legal systems to reconcile their views on the appropriate actions to be taken by the parties and by a tribunal in case of breach. The result has been a series of provisions which are in general harmony with one another but which will often be unfamiliar to lawyers from any given legal system.
Thus, the present Chapter identifies generally the scope of relief available under each of the three bodies of rules, namely Part III (partial) of the CISG, Chapter 7 of the UNIDROIT Principles and Chapters 8 and 9 of the PECL, in light of traditional and modern theories. This Chapter seeks to take an overview of remedies in the event of non-performance while leaving the substantively major remedial provisions to be discussed in the following chapters. In so doing, it firstly touches on the definition of non-performance in general. After that, the available remedies are shown in a manner limited to a descriptively bare outline rather than a more detailed discussion. Finally, this Chapter outlines briefly the structure of this contribution.
32. See Maskow, Dietrich in "Hardship and Force Majeure": 40 Am.J.Comp.L. (1992); p. 657. Available online at ‹http://tldb.uni-koeln.de/TLDB.html› ; TLDB Document ID: 126400.
33. See Survey of the International Sale of Goods 3, L. Lafili, et al. eds., (1986); p. 14.
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