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An example of a situation where consequential damages is awarded:
The remedies are therefore contractual; consequential damages may be claimed.
Foreseeability - Generally, no consequential damages unless they are known or foreseeable.
Saudi Courts also preclude consequential damages based on anticipated profits.
Plus we want consequential damages, evacuation costs, loss of personal property, personal injury."
For example, consequential damages are a potential type of expectation damages which arise in contract law.
Having written a bad paycheck, he must reimburse an employee for "consequential damages" that clearly result from his chicanery.
Special damages are sometimes divided into incidental damages, and consequential damages.
The affected walls had to be demolished, and Roberts sued successfully for consequential damages arising from the breach.
Hadley v. Baxendale establishes general and consequential damages.
Historically, contractual actions entitle the buyer to consequential damages, while the aedilitian remedies do not.
Consequential damages are those that are not a direct result of an act, but a consequence of the initial act.
The owner of the chattel may seek conversion damages for the value of the original materials plus any consequential damages.
Total measure of damages: compensatory damages and consequential damages (lost profit)
Not subject to his hearings, Roberts said, are claims for lost free agency, lost employment, emotional distress, lost security, lost outside income and "other consequential damages."
(b) We hereby exclude liability for indirect, special or consequential damages, even if you have previously advised us of the possibility of such damages.
Consequential damages are those damages which, although not naturally flowing from a breach, are naturally supposed by both parties at the time of contract formation.
Consequential damages, otherwise known as special damages, are damages you can prove occurred because of the failure of one party to meet a contractual obligation.
Princess Cruises was involved in litigation with GE in 1998 over consequential damages and lost profits resulting from a contract the two parties entered into.
Where damages are awarded in lieu of, or to complete, the performance, they are known as surrogate damages, as opposed to other consequential damages.
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that consequential damages are not available in U.S. Federal takings.
Consequential damages would be the lost business if that person was unable to get to the meeting, if both parties knew the reason the party was renting the car.
The question of what constitutes a latent defect went unresolved, as did the matter of whether liability for consequential damages has its foundations on breach or on delict.
Of this amount, only $1 billion was designated as direct "infrastructure damages"; the rest was attributed to consequential damages such as industry losses and the city's tarnished image.
Of course, this is not the most ideal rule for plaintiffs, since consequential damages for breach of contract are subject to certain limitations (see Hadley v. Baxendale).