Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES AND THE DUTY TO MITIGATE IN NEW YORK MARITIME ARBITRATIONS
Lucienne Carasso Bulow.*
Damages are the monetary compensation given to a party who has been wronged. Before contract damages can be awarded, there must be a breach. Once a breach is established, the traditional rule of damages attempts to restore the wronged party into the position in which he would have been had no breach occurred. United States law has a well-established rule that, for breach of contract, the defendant is liable only for consequences which, at the time the contract was made, could have been considered as reasonably foreseeable if the contract were broken1.
This paper will use the concept of “consequential damages” in a broader meaning than has usually been used in maritime arbitrations. By “consequential damages”, U.S. maritime arbitrators usually mean damages which are too remote to be awarded. In this paper, this phrase will be used to include all unusual damages which are seldom discussed at International Congresses because they cannot easily be categorized and because there is no consensus as to how they should be treated2. We will use this phrase to describe all damages which result more or less directly from a breach of contract but which are potentially too remote to be awarded, yet which can be found to be recoverable when the Panel applies the test of foreseeability.
In discussing “consequential damages”, this paper will show that there has been a gradual liberalization as to the recovery of such damages. In so doing, it will examine the practical applications, in recent New York arbitrations, of two doctrines which have evolved to limit the damages which can be awarded: the doctrine of foreseeability and the doctrine of avoidable consequences, more colloquially known as the “duty to mitigate” loss by the wronged party. This paper will concern itself only with cases of total breach due to non-performance of a contract and with cases of partial breach where performance took place, but after a delay.
Although numerous U.S. court decisions have dealt with foreseeability and remoteness of damage3, they all use as their principal point of reference (as do maritime arbitrations) the 1854 English case of Hadley v. Baxendale
4. In that case, the court, in an effort to limit the amount of the damages which juries could award, enunciated its famous rule5:
* Ph.D., Yale University. Member of the Society of Maritime Arbitrators Inc., New York. This paper was presented at the Vlth International Congress of Maritime Arbitrators held in Monaco in October 1983. Some revisions have since been made. SMA in the footnotes refers to the Award service of the Society of Maritime Arbitrators.
1 Williston on Contracts, 3rd edn., s. 1344.
2 Many decisions regarding such damages are not unanimous.
3 The leading U.S. case is probably Globe Refining Co. v. Landa Cotton Oil Co., 190 U.S. 540, 47 L.ed 117, 23 S. Ct. 754 (1903).
4 (1854) 9 Exch. 341, 156 Eng. Rep. 145.
5 At pp. 354 and 151 respectively. This rule was developed to justify the court’s limiting of excessive amounts of damages awarded by juries in the 18th and 19th centuries. Unlike the Napoleonic Code (1804), which provided for recovery of only foreseeable damages, English law did not have a general principle that set a limit on the award of damages. For further discussion on the historical background of the doctrine, see Charles T. McCormick, Handbook on the Law of Damages, St. Paul, Minn: West Publishing Co. (1935), Art. 138; Danzig, 4 J. Legal Studies 249 (1975).
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