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What Is a Hardship Clause?

Esther Ejim
By
Updated May 17, 2024
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A hardship clause is a contractual term that refers to a situation where the parties to a contract may encounter a situation in the course of their contractual relationship that may make it exceedingly hard for either of them to fulfill the terms agreed upon in their contract. In this situation, the hardship clause provides an option for both parties to renegotiate the terms, making the performance of the contract reasonably easier for both parties. One point to note is the fact that a hardship clause is not meant to preclude any party from the performance of the terms of the contract. Rather, the hardship clause simply leaves a sort of wriggle room where the parties to the contract can sit down and draw up an alternative plan.

An example of the application of the hardship clause can be drawn by using an example of two business partners and parties to a contract: Mr. A and Mr. B. In this situation, assume that Mr. A and Mr. B have signed a contract for Mr. A to build a prefabricated building for Mr. B in his company by a certain date and according to a specific design. During the construction and production of Mr. B’s prefabricated building, Mr. A is erroneously given the design of another customer, Mr. C, who has a similar design to Mr. B’s design. Mr. A produces the building Mr. B rejects, because it is not precisely per his specification. In the meanwhile, part of Mr. A’s production plant burns down and he does not have the necessary equipment to produce the exact requirement of Mr. B’s building.

By the application of the hardship clause in the contract between Mr. A and Mr. C, they could renegotiate the contract where Mr. B would choose another plan that Mr. A can produce with the available equipment since he no longer has the capacity or equipment needed to produce the previous design. Mr. A also cannot replace the destroyed equipment, because the company that manufactures the equipment needed to produce Mr. B’s exact design has declared bankruptcy and no longer produces the equipment. In this case, Mr. A would still be expected to produce a prefabricated building for Mr. B since he has other equipment that can perform the best alternative to the design. Still, the two parties would have to work out an alternative that would allow Mr. A to fulfill his obligations as spelled out by the provisions of the hardship clause.

WiseGeek is dedicated to providing accurate and trustworthy information. We carefully select reputable sources and employ a rigorous fact-checking process to maintain the highest standards. To learn more about our commitment to accuracy, read our editorial process.
Esther Ejim
By Esther Ejim , Former Writer
Esther Ejim, a visionary leader and humanitarian, uses her writing to promote positive change. As the founder and executive director of a charitable organization, she actively encourages the well-being of vulnerable populations through her compelling storytelling. Esther's writing draws from her diverse leadership roles, business experiences, and educational background, helping her to create impactful content.

Discussion Comments

By anon980531 — On Dec 05, 2014

Get all of the people in your area who have been negatively affected and amend the zoning to allow for what you need. You may have to hire a lawyer for the group.

Or use land contracts with terms to sell (not a lease but really the same). If it burns, any home would have to be to code. If it burns more than 50 percent, why would you want to rebuild to older codes or zoning laws?

By anon302105 — On Nov 07, 2012

How long do you have to have a business in order for a grandfather law to be in effect. If the law changes tomorrow, and I just went into business six months ago, is that long enough for a grandfather law to hold up?

By anon249780 — On Feb 22, 2012

When the city changed the zoning laws in 2007, our multi-family home is now a legal non-conforming home. We have not been able to sell the multi-family home due to the changes in the zoning laws.

The house can not be rebuilt if damaged over 50 percent. The banks have been pulling back on loaning money on non-conforming homes.

Do we have any right as owners? We have a single family home that is non-conforming and if it burns down we can not rebuild the home at all. The point is the house was a conforming home. The city wants to get rid of all landlords in the area and make it owner occupied single family homes.

We must have some rights. We wanted to retire this year and try to move to a warmer climate.

Esther Ejim

Esther Ejim

Former Writer

Esther Ejim, a visionary leader and humanitarian, uses her writing to promote positive change. As the founder and...
Learn more
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