Enquiring knowledgeable people Inquisitive education Hospital Treasury

Legal consequences after termination of the contract

home page

Legal consequences after termination of the contract


        

Submit answer
Favorable reply
  • 2024-06-17 23:01:40

    1. If the contract has not been performed after it is dissolved, the performance shall be terminated;
    2. If the contract has been performed, the parties may, depending on the performance and the nature of the contract, request restoration or other remedial measures, and have the right to claim damages. If a contract is terminated due to breach of contract, the party with the right to terminate may request the breaching party to bear the liability for breach of contract, unless otherwise agreed by the parties. After the main contract is dissolved, the guarantor shall still be liable for the civil liability that the debtor should bear, except as otherwise agreed in the guarantee contract.
    In accordance with Article 567 of the Civil Code, the termination of the contractual rights and obligations shall not affect the validity of the settlement and liquidation clauses in the contract.
    Article 568 If the parties owe debts to each other and the subject matter of the debts is of the same type and quality, either party may set off its own debts against the debts due to the other party; However, it shall not be offset according to the nature of the debt, the agreement of the parties or the legal provisions. If a party claims to set off, it shall notify the other party. The notice takes effect when it reaches the other party. The offset may not be subject to conditions or time limits.
    Article 569 If the parties owe debts to each other and the type and quality of the subject matter are different, they may also offset the debts if they reach consensus through consultation.
    Article 570 The obligor may place the subject matter in escrow if it is difficult to perform under any of the following circumstances:
    (1) The creditor refuses to accept without justified reasons;
    (2) The creditor's whereabouts are unknown;
    (3) When the creditor dies, no heir or administrator is determined, or when the creditor loses civil capacity, no guardian is determined;
    (4) Other circumstances prescribed by law. If the subject matter is not suitable for escrow or the escrow fee is too high, the debtor may auction or sell the subject matter according to law and place the proceeds in escrow.

    Li***

    2024-06-17 23:01:40

  • civil Relevant knowledge

  • law

Related recommendations

Loading
Latest Q&A Recommendation Hot topics Hot spot recommendation
  • 1-20
  • 21-40
  • 41-60
  • 61-80
  • 81-100
  • 101-120
  • 121-140
  • 141-160
  • 161-180
  • 181-200
  • 1-20
  • 21-40
  • 41-60
  • 61-80
  • 81-100
  • 101-120
  • 121-140
  • 141-160
  • 161-180
  • 181-200
  • 1-20
  • 21-40
  • 41-60
  • 61-80
  • 81-100
  • 101-120
  • 121-140
  • 141-160
  • 161-180
  • 181-200
  • 1-20
  • 21-40
  • 41-60
  • 61-80
  • 81-100
  • 101-120
  • 121-140
  • 141-160
  • 161-180
  • 181-200
return
Top
help opinion
feedback

Confirm to report this problem

Reason for reporting (required):