Other Added
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Business > Contracts That Work - Limitations of Liability

Tags

  • companies
  • others
  • these
  • unacceptable level
  • project worth
  • potentially unlimited

  • Links

  • Lowering Your Cholesterol ??“ Simple Tips That Work
  • Are Women Really Equal, and Should They Be?
  • How Do you Find a Good Auto Insurance Quote in Michigan?
  • Other Added - Contracts That Work - Limitations of Liability

    Jewellery Impressions In The World Of Fashion Jewellery
    In today’s world of conscious people, fashion Jewelry is playing a remarkable role in giving vivacity to one’s attitude. Starting from clothes, a woman is also quite choosy in the selection of Jewellery she wears. The more attractive the Jewellery is, the more easier it will be for her to choose them. Jewelry is not only a status symbol as many people invest their life long savings on the Jewelry, they carry a set of jewels years after years, generation after generation. Nowadays jewelry market is turning out to be profitable market for investment as well as elegant way of updating one’s attire. Starting from vintage jewelry to contemporary ones all of them are part of the jewelry market.Diamond and pearls are long lasting favorites of women. Enduring these
    le, provided X is sufficiently large. A $500,000 cap is terribly insufficient if the exposure is $2 or 3 million. In addition, with a specified cap, vendor cannot claim unknown and potentially unlimited exposure, AND Vendor can obtain the necessarily insurance more easily.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to the limits of its insurance. This approach removes the objection that the risk cannot be quantified and that it cannot be insured against. BUT:
    - The insurance limits must be sufficient to cover the possible risk; - Customer must require certificates of insurance, evidencing the existence of insurance (not to mention that the insurance must be from reputable companies, licensed to do business in your state); - Customer must monitor Vendor’s compliance.

    All in all, focusing on the limits of vendor’s insurance may be the most productive approach. It overcomes most standard vendor objections AND it helps ensure that sufficient assets are

    Why Your Tiny Business Wants A Toll Free Number NOW
    All small business owners dream of greater leverage which means the reaping large profits from a simple inexpensive tool. So they look around for tools, tactics or software that will give them an edge. But they miss one of the most effective tools that sits right under their nose. The profit-building tool that most small business people miss is the toll free number.Independent surveys have shown that toll free numbers can increase your business’ sales, improve the branding and perception of your company and significantly increase the value of your business at the point of sale. Below are 3 critical reasons why you should get a toll free number for your small business today.Reason 1. You’ll Enjoy Increased SalesVanity or custom toll free numbers suc
    Limitations of Liability Thomas J. Hall, JD It’s a provision found in almost every commercial contract: “Vendor shall be liable only for direct damages, in an amount not to exceed $X. In no event will vendor be liable for indirect, special, consequential, exemplary, or punitive damages or for lost profits.” Although the actual words may vary, the meaning is the same:
    • The most vendor will pay is $X;
    • For certain claims, vendor has NO liability.
    Such provisions raise a number of issues:
    • They are unfair. Vendor’s liability is capped, but customer’s is not. In other words, vendor knows his or her own maximum liability under the contract, while customer’s liability is unlimited.
    • Vendor’s maximum liability - $X – may be inadequate. For example, “X” may be “no more than customer paid under this contract” or “no more than customer paid in the xyz months preceding the event giving rise to the claim for damages.” If we assume customer is paying 10 grand a month, and “xyz” is 12 months, then vendor’s liability is capped at $120,000. While that is not pocket change, is it adequate to cover damage that vendor could cause? How much damage can a vendor cause?
    • How much is the contract worth?
    • How much is the over-all project worth?
    • Will the vendor have access to sensitive/valuable information?
    • Will the vendor have access to sensitive systems or facilities?
    Being good business persons, vendors will resist expanding their potential liability, and they will offer a variety of arguments in opposition. Some of these arguments carry more weight than others:
    • “We cannot accept unlimited liability.”
    Customer is not asking for unlimited liability, just responsibility. Customer should not bear a loss resulting from errors or omissions of vendor. Curiously, standard language routinely exposes customers to unlimited liability.
    • “Our pricing tied to the amount of liability we can accept.” Again, customer is simply looking for responsibility. In addition, a great price combined with an unacceptable level of risk is not a good deal. A customer who is concerned only with price may be persuaded by this argument. Customers willing to assess the project as a whole may decide that the “great price” is not a good deal after all. There is nothing wrong with telling a vendor “No.”
    • “We need a sum certain, so we can manage our risk and buy our insurance, etc.” Customer has the same concerns, so it is only fair to make the limitation mutual. Also, customer has no objection to a sum certain; customer merely wants an ADEQUATE sum. Which is one of the questions we began with.
    It may not be possible to determine with certainty how much protection is enough; in which case it is better to ask for too much rather than too little. A number of tools are worth consideration:
    • X times the fees paid and payable under the contract. Three times is a good starting point. Vendor cannot object that they cannot quantify the risk. But, is it adequate to cover the exposure?
    • Vendor will be responsible for direct damages incurred. Vendor will object that “direct damages” cannot be quantified. But:
    - “Direct damages”- damages that are foreseeable and which flow directly from the breach or action – are the traditional measure of damages under contract law. This is the amount vendor, and customer, would be liable for if the contract did not contain a limitation of liability;
    - Presumably vendor carries insurance. (If they do not, why are you doing business with them?)
    - Is it unfair to ask the vendor to make good any harm that it causes?
    - One caveat. As with any legal term, the meaning of “direct damages” is open to interpretation, and debate, and debate.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to $X. We began with this approach, which is perfectly reasonable, provided X is sufficiently large. A $500,000 cap is terribly insufficient if the exposure is $2 or 3 million. In addition, with a specified cap, vendor cannot claim unknown and potentially unlimited exposure, AND Vendor can obtain the necessarily insurance more easily.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to the limits of its insurance. This approach removes the objection that the risk cannot be quantified and that it cannot be insured against. BUT:
    - The insurance limits must be sufficient to cover the possible risk; - Customer must require certificates of insurance, evidencing the existence of insurance (not to mention that the insurance must be from reputable companies, licensed to do business in your state); - Customer must monitor Vendor’s compliance.

    All in all, focusing on the limits of vendor’s insurance may be the most productive approach. It overcomes most standard vendor objections AND it helps ensure that sufficient assets are a

    Hold Your Nose and Look into Opportunities Others Avoid to Make 20 Times Faster Improvements
    FIRST IMPRESSIONS CAN KEEP YOU FROM OPPORTUNITIESMost people can identify situations in which they dismissed an opportunity that someone else capitalized on later. Often these opportunities were overlooked or rejected because they were perceived as dull, boring, or unpleasant. You may recall the fairy tale of "The Ugly Duckling." It is the story of a cast-off baby bird that is mistreated because it is unattractive to the young ducklings raised with it. Much to everyone's surprise the ugly duckling develops into a beautiful swan. Thus, what we call the unattractiveness stall prevents people from seeing potential because they make judgments based on insufficient knowledge.As you contemplate this point, it is worth remembering that if Alexander Fleming had b
    is paying 10 grand a month, and “xyz” is 12 months, then vendor’s liability is capped at $120,000. While that is not pocket change, is it adequate to cover damage that vendor could cause? How much damage can a vendor cause?
    • How much is the contract worth?
    • How much is the over-all project worth?
    • Will the vendor have access to sensitive/valuable information?
    • Will the vendor have access to sensitive systems or facilities?
    Being good business persons, vendors will resist expanding their potential liability, and they will offer a variety of arguments in opposition. Some of these arguments carry more weight than others:
    • “We cannot accept unlimited liability.”
    Customer is not asking for unlimited liability, just responsibility. Customer should not bear a loss resulting from errors or omissions of vendor. Curiously, standard language routinely exposes customers to unlimited liability.
    • “Our pricing tied to the amount of liability we can accept.” Again, customer is simply looking for responsibility. In addition, a great price combined with an unacceptable level of risk is not a good deal. A customer who is concerned only with price may be persuaded by this argument. Customers willing to assess the project as a whole may decide that the “great price” is not a good deal after all. There is nothing wrong with telling a vendor “No.”
    • “We need a sum certain, so we can manage our risk and buy our insurance, etc.” Customer has the same concerns, so it is only fair to make the limitation mutual. Also, customer has no objection to a sum certain; customer merely wants an ADEQUATE sum. Which is one of the questions we began with.
    It may not be possible to determine with certainty how much protection is enough; in which case it is better to ask for too much rather than too little. A number of tools are worth consideration:
    • X times the fees paid and payable under the contract. Three times is a good starting point. Vendor cannot object that they cannot quantify the risk. But, is it adequate to cover the exposure?
    • Vendor will be responsible for direct damages incurred. Vendor will object that “direct damages” cannot be quantified. But:
    - “Direct damages”- damages that are foreseeable and which flow directly from the breach or action – are the traditional measure of damages under contract law. This is the amount vendor, and customer, would be liable for if the contract did not contain a limitation of liability;
    - Presumably vendor carries insurance. (If they do not, why are you doing business with them?)
    - Is it unfair to ask the vendor to make good any harm that it causes?
    - One caveat. As with any legal term, the meaning of “direct damages” is open to interpretation, and debate, and debate.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to $X. We began with this approach, which is perfectly reasonable, provided X is sufficiently large. A $500,000 cap is terribly insufficient if the exposure is $2 or 3 million. In addition, with a specified cap, vendor cannot claim unknown and potentially unlimited exposure, AND Vendor can obtain the necessarily insurance more easily.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to the limits of its insurance. This approach removes the objection that the risk cannot be quantified and that it cannot be insured against. BUT:
    - The insurance limits must be sufficient to cover the possible risk; - Customer must require certificates of insurance, evidencing the existence of insurance (not to mention that the insurance must be from reputable companies, licensed to do business in your state); - Customer must monitor Vendor’s compliance.

    All in all, focusing on the limits of vendor’s insurance may be the most productive approach. It overcomes most standard vendor objections AND it helps ensure that sufficient assets are

    Start A Dropship Pet Store
    Who would want to start an online pet store. Pet lovers ofcourse. Indeed a love of pets is probably the number one criteria for setting up a small pet shop online. A pet store run online can be based upon a number of products such as wholesale pet supply stores, pet food or some other pet product.Starting a pet-based home business is not easy but again it is not as hard as you might think. Normally there is no need to have a large space to keep the pet products in. In fact if you open an online pet store where you can sell pet products, you will only need to stock and maintain select products, the bulk of what you need can actually be kept and maintained by others. The rest of the products for pets can be kept by a dropshipping company that carries products and
    of liability we can accept.” Again, customer is simply looking for responsibility. In addition, a great price combined with an unacceptable level of risk is not a good deal. A customer who is concerned only with price may be persuaded by this argument. Customers willing to assess the project as a whole may decide that the “great price” is not a good deal after all. There is nothing wrong with telling a vendor “No.”
    • “We need a sum certain, so we can manage our risk and buy our insurance, etc.” Customer has the same concerns, so it is only fair to make the limitation mutual. Also, customer has no objection to a sum certain; customer merely wants an ADEQUATE sum. Which is one of the questions we began with.
    It may not be possible to determine with certainty how much protection is enough; in which case it is better to ask for too much rather than too little. A number of tools are worth consideration:
    • X times the fees paid and payable under the contract. Three times is a good starting point. Vendor cannot object that they cannot quantify the risk. But, is it adequate to cover the exposure?
    • Vendor will be responsible for direct damages incurred. Vendor will object that “direct damages” cannot be quantified. But:
    - “Direct damages”- damages that are foreseeable and which flow directly from the breach or action – are the traditional measure of damages under contract law. This is the amount vendor, and customer, would be liable for if the contract did not contain a limitation of liability;
    - Presumably vendor carries insurance. (If they do not, why are you doing business with them?)
    - Is it unfair to ask the vendor to make good any harm that it causes?
    - One caveat. As with any legal term, the meaning of “direct damages” is open to interpretation, and debate, and debate.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to $X. We began with this approach, which is perfectly reasonable, provided X is sufficiently large. A $500,000 cap is terribly insufficient if the exposure is $2 or 3 million. In addition, with a specified cap, vendor cannot claim unknown and potentially unlimited exposure, AND Vendor can obtain the necessarily insurance more easily.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to the limits of its insurance. This approach removes the objection that the risk cannot be quantified and that it cannot be insured against. BUT:
    - The insurance limits must be sufficient to cover the possible risk; - Customer must require certificates of insurance, evidencing the existence of insurance (not to mention that the insurance must be from reputable companies, licensed to do business in your state); - Customer must monitor Vendor’s compliance.

    All in all, focusing on the limits of vendor’s insurance may be the most productive approach. It overcomes most standard vendor objections AND it helps ensure that sufficient assets are

    Strategies For Evaluating Policy Management Tools
    Policy management tools of any enterprise need constant evaluation to ensure the policies support the generation of precise, unprejudiced, evidence-based information that will ensure that those in charge can make informed decisions regarding changes to the policies to have certain desired end results. Evaluations of policy management tools aid in archiving the results and also help those in charge manage for results.Evaluating Policy Management Tools: Evaluation helps track and determine the actual performance, giving decision makers a chance to make objective and informed decisions. Evaluating helps managers design, improve the design of policies or change the design of existing policies. It helps to study the effectiveness and the overall impact of the polici
    contract. Three times is a good starting point. Vendor cannot object that they cannot quantify the risk. But, is it adequate to cover the exposure?
    • Vendor will be responsible for direct damages incurred. Vendor will object that “direct damages” cannot be quantified. But:
    - “Direct damages”- damages that are foreseeable and which flow directly from the breach or action – are the traditional measure of damages under contract law. This is the amount vendor, and customer, would be liable for if the contract did not contain a limitation of liability;
    - Presumably vendor carries insurance. (If they do not, why are you doing business with them?)
    - Is it unfair to ask the vendor to make good any harm that it causes?
    - One caveat. As with any legal term, the meaning of “direct damages” is open to interpretation, and debate, and debate.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to $X. We began with this approach, which is perfectly reasonable, provided X is sufficiently large. A $500,000 cap is terribly insufficient if the exposure is $2 or 3 million. In addition, with a specified cap, vendor cannot claim unknown and potentially unlimited exposure, AND Vendor can obtain the necessarily insurance more easily.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to the limits of its insurance. This approach removes the objection that the risk cannot be quantified and that it cannot be insured against. BUT:
    - The insurance limits must be sufficient to cover the possible risk; - Customer must require certificates of insurance, evidencing the existence of insurance (not to mention that the insurance must be from reputable companies, licensed to do business in your state); - Customer must monitor Vendor’s compliance.

    All in all, focusing on the limits of vendor’s insurance may be the most productive approach. It overcomes most standard vendor objections AND it helps ensure that sufficient assets are

    Newspaper Vending Machines
    Newspaper vending machines are used for the sale or distribution of newspapers, periodicals, and commercial flyers. Most machines have a currency detector that verifies if the amount of money deposited is sufficient for the buying of the desired newspaper. Newspaper vending machines are reliable, easy to service, and easy to locate. They give you an exceptional return on your investment.Newspaper vending machines are commonly found on every street. The location is the key factor in the success or failure of newspaper vending. Generally, newspaper vending machines are placed in busy and high-traffic locations such as near restrooms and public transportation stations. The most common newspaper vending machine is an enclosed box having a locked door. It can be open
    le, provided X is sufficiently large. A $500,000 cap is terribly insufficient if the exposure is $2 or 3 million. In addition, with a specified cap, vendor cannot claim unknown and potentially unlimited exposure, AND Vendor can obtain the necessarily insurance more easily.
    • Vendor will be responsible for up to the limits of its insurance. This approach removes the objection that the risk cannot be quantified and that it cannot be insured against. BUT:
    - The insurance limits must be sufficient to cover the possible risk; - Customer must require certificates of insurance, evidencing the existence of insurance (not to mention that the insurance must be from reputable companies, licensed to do business in your state); - Customer must monitor Vendor’s compliance.

    All in all, focusing on the limits of vendor’s insurance may be the most productive approach. It overcomes most standard vendor objections AND it helps ensure that sufficient assets are available if things to wrong. Without insurance, vendor may not have sufficient liquid assets to cover the damages. A judgment against a vendor is of little value if it cannot be enforced. A word about the types of damages to be covered. Contract law traditional protects against direct, foreseeable damages, not those that are so remote that they cannot be reasonably foreseen. The test of “reasonably foreseeable damages” is perhaps misleading. If vendor knows that dropping the ball will interrupt customer’s core business processes, vendor should reasonably expect that customer suffer lost profits.

    But what would those profits have been had the vendor delivered as promised? Would customer have earned the millions it expected, or would mistakes by customer, or changes in the market, have produced substantially less revenue? Better to exclude special, exemplary and punitive damages – which are awarded by the court (or jury) and have little direct relation to the value of the contract or the harm done, and specify a comfortable limit on damages – all damages, however described or characterized. Too much protection costs vendor little or nothing. Too little could cost customer dearly.

    Copyright 2006, Thomas J. Hall. All rights reserved tom@tomhalllaw.com

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.otheradded.com/article/2034/otheradded-Contracts-That-Work--Limitations-of-Liability.html">Contracts That Work - Limitations of Liability</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.otheradded.com/article/2034/otheradded-Contracts-That-Work--Limitations-of-Liability.html]Contracts That Work - Limitations of Liability[/url]

    Related Articles:

    How to Manage Employee Retention

    Business Debt Consolidation Loan - Is a Business Debt Consolidation Loan the Way to Go?

    Business Plan Basics - Part 2

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com