Prepare for the JD Next Exam with our comprehensive quiz. Engage with multiple choice questions, each featuring detailed explanations and hints to facilitate understanding. Achieve success with our tailored study tools!

Each practice test/flash card set has 50 randomly selected questions from a bank of over 500. You'll get a new set of questions each time!

Practice this question and more.


If a buyer refuses to complete a contract to purchase oil at $50 per barrel when the price drops to $44, how much can the seller recover?

  1. $0

  2. $6,000

  3. $50,000

  4. $44,000

The correct answer is: $6,000

In a situation where a buyer refuses to fulfill a contract to purchase oil at $50 per barrel after the market price has dropped to $44, the seller can seek to recover the difference in value due to the breach of contract. The seller had expected to sell the oil at $50 per barrel, but now, due to the buyer's refusal, they can only sell it at the lower market price of $44 per barrel. This creates a financial loss for the seller of $6 per barrel, calculated as follows: 1. Determine the price difference: $50 (contracted price) - $44 (market price) = $6 loss per barrel. Assuming the seller had a contractual obligation to sell a specific number of barrels, the total recovery would depend on the number of barrels not sold due to the breach. If we assume the seller had a contract for 1,000 barrels, the total loss from this breach would amount to: 2. Calculate total loss: $6 loss per barrel * 1,000 barrels = $6,000. This amount represents the economic harm experienced by the seller due to the buyer's failure to complete the contract. Hence, the appropriate recovery for the seller would be $6,000.