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Neither party will be liable for inadequate performance to the extent caused by a condition (for example, natural disaster, act of war or terrorism, riot, labor condition, governmental action, and Internet disturbance) that was beyond the partys reasonable control.
Neither party will be liable for inadequate performance to the extent caused by a condition (for example, natural disaster, act of war or terrorism, riot, labor condition, governmental action, and Internet disturbance) that was beyond the partys reasonable control.
Force majeure is a provision in a contract that frees both parties from obligation if an extraordinary event directly prevents one or both parties from performing.
A force majeure clause allocates the risk of loss if performance is hindered, delayed, or prevented because of an event that the parties could not have anticipated or controlled. It provides a contractual defense, the scope and effect of which will depend on the express terms of a particular contract.
Not only must a court find that the COVID-19 pandemic was intended by both parties, at the time the contract was executed, to fall under one of the categories listed in the adopted force majeure clause, but the pandemic must also render performance by one of the parties impracticable or impossible after reviewing the
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What are the three elements of force majeure? In general, for an event to trigger a force majeure clause, it must be unforeseeable, external to the parties of the contract, and serious enough that it renders it impossible for the party to perform its contractual obligations.
The party affected by Force Majeure is usually obligated to provide prompt written notice to the counterparty of the occurrence of the Force Majeure event (in reasonable detail) and the expected duration of the events effect on the party.
Common examples of force majeure events include acts of war, terrorist attacks, epidemics, pandemics like COVID-19, death, labor strikes, riots, crime or property theft, acts of God, natural disasters (like blizzards, earthquakes, or hurricanes), or acts of terrorism.

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