ContractForce Majeure Clause • May 23rd, 2022 • Delaware
Contract Type FiledMay 23rd, 2022 Jurisdiction
ContractForce Majeure Clause • January 21st, 2022
Contract Type FiledJanuary 21st, 2022Performance of this Contract/Agreement by either party shall be subject to force majeure, which includes but is not limited to acts of God, fire, flood, natural disaster, war or threat of war, acts or threats of terrorism, civil disorder or protests, unauthorized strikes, governmental act, order, regulation, suggestion or advisory, pandemics, epidemics, recognized health threats as determined by the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or state or local government authority or health agencies (including, but not limited to the health threats of COVID-19, H1N1 or other infectious diseases), curtailment of transportation facilities or other occurrence beyond the control of the parties, where any of those factors, circumstances, situations, or conditions or similar ones
Force Majeure ClausesForce Majeure Clause • May 2nd, 2021
Contract Type FiledMay 2nd, 2021
Primjer odredbe:Force Majeure Clause • January 10th, 2024
Contract Type FiledJanuary 10th, 2024
Pandemi Corona Sebagai Alasan Force Majeur Dalam Suatu Kontrak BisnisForce Majeure Clause • June 3rd, 2020
Contract Type FiledJune 3rd, 2020Contract is an agreement made by the parties in a written form. Agreement is an act that binds one person or more to one or more persons. The results of this agreement is a legal relationship between the parties, which includes the existence of rights and obligations. Contract usually contains by the rules of insistence or known as force majeur (overmacht). The rules of force majeure is due to protect the debtor when carrying out its obligations to the creditor an event that occurs outside the authority of the party concerned. Force majeure can be in the form of earthquake, fire, flood, landslide, war, military coup, embargo, epidemic, and so on. During the corona pandemic which is currently struck out whole of the world, it certainly has an impact on the implementation of business contract. This study examines about force majeure in an agreement that occurred during the corona virus pandemic cannot automatically be used as a reason for canceling business contract, but can be used as a
ContractForce Majeure Clause • January 21st, 2022
Contract Type FiledJanuary 21st, 2022Performance of this Contract/Agreement by either party shall be subject to force majeure, which includes but is not limited to acts of God, fire, flood, natural disaster, war or threat of war, acts or threats of terrorism, civil disorder or protests, unauthorized strikes, governmental act, order, regulation, suggestion or advisory, pandemics, epidemics, recognized health threats as determined by the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or state or local government authority or health agencies (including, but not limited to the health threats of COVID-19, H1N1 or other infectious diseases), curtailment of transportation facilities or other occurrence beyond the control of the parties, where any of those factors, circumstances, situations, or conditions or similar ones
MAJEURE FORCEForce Majeure Clause • January 4th, 2020
Contract Type FiledJanuary 4th, 2020The concept of the “Force Majeure” is commonly found in contracts, stipulating that the terms of a given agreement will be suspended due to circumstances beyond either party’s control. These circumstances include but are not limited to war, strike, natural disasters (legally termed “Acts of God”), and epidemics. Normally relegated to the fine print, the Force Majeure clause has hidden in plain sight, quietly acknowledging the possibility of crisis – and as a result, individuals have not. From the vantage point of sheltered-in-place Spring 2020, the Force Majeure clause takes on an ironic prescience: we did foresee catastrophe – we simply didn’t prepare for it.
ContractForce Majeure Clause • July 9th, 2020
Contract Type FiledJuly 9th, 2020Performance of this Contract/Agreement by either party shall be subject to force majeure, which includes but is not limited to acts of God, fire, flood, natural disaster, war or threat of war, acts or threats of terrorism, civil disorder or protests, unauthorized strikes, governmental act, order, regulation, suggestion or advisory, pandemics, epidemics, recognized health threats as determined by the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or state or local government authority or health agencies (including, but not limited to the health threats of COVID-19, H1N1 or other infectious diseases), curtailment of transportation facilities or other occurrence beyond the control of the parties, where any of those factors, circumstances, situations, or conditions or similar ones