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국제무역거래상 실행곤란성이론에 관한 상학적 고찰A Commercial Study on the Doctrine of Impracticability in International Trade Transaction - Focused on the Doctrine of America -

Other Titles
A Commercial Study on the Doctrine of Impracticability in International Trade Transaction - Focused on the Doctrine of America -
Authors
허재창한낙현
Issue Date
2009
Publisher
한국무역학회
Keywords
실행곤란성이론; 국제무역거래; 미국통일상법전 제2-615조; 불가항력조항; 제2차 리스테이트먼트; Doctrine of Impracticability; International Trade Transaction; U.C.C. §2-615; Force Majeure Clause; Restatement(Second) of Contracts; Doctrine of Impracticability; International Trade Transaction; U.C.C. §2-615; Force Majeure Clause; Restatement(Second) of Contracts
Citation
무역학회지, v.34, no.5, pp 143 - 170
Pages
28
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
무역학회지
Volume
34
Number
5
Start Page
143
End Page
170
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/26670
ISSN
1226-2765
Abstract
The purpose of this study aims to analyse the doctrine of impracticability in international trade transaction with the doctrine of America. In general, the doctrine of impracticability of performance operates to the advantage of parties that are bound to furnish goods, land, services, or some similar performance, while the doctrine of frustration of purpose operates to the advantage of parties that are to pay money in return for those performance. The common law development just described is synthesized in U.C.C. §2-615, Excuse by Failure of Presupposed Conditions. Under that section, except so far as a seller has assumed a greater obligation, delay in performance, in whole or in part, is bot a breach of the seller’s duty. Despite the possible negative inference that might be drawn from the first dozen words, this is a default rule and is often changed by an express provision-commonly called a force majeure clause-excusing the seller in situations not covered by the U.C.C §2-615. Nevertheless, the Code’s synthesis, designed for the sale of goods, has already had a substantial influence on the law of contract generally and has been adapted by the Restatement(Second) of Contracts. Under the new synthesis, the party that claims that a supervening event or contingency prevented performance must meet four requirements. First, the event must have made performance as agreed...impracticable. Second, the nonoccurrence of the event must have been a basic assumption on which the contract was made. Third, the impracticability must have resulted without the fault of the party seeking to be excused. Fourth, that party must not have assumed a greater obligation than the law imposes. Although these requirements involve questions of fact, courts have sometimes been reluctant to entrust the granting of excuse on the ground to a jury.
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