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Handicapped Children's Education Board of Sheboygan County v. Lukaszewski, 112 Wis.2d 197, 332 N.W.2d 774 (1983) p651.

Subject:

breach of contract

Facts:

Procedure:

In December of 1978 D initiated an action against P for breach of contract. D alleged that as a result of the breach it suffered damage in the amount of additional compensation it was required to pay P's replacement. The trial court ruled P had breached her contract and awarded D damages. Court of appeals upheld breach of contract rule, but reversed the damage award.

Issue:

  1. Did P breach her employment contract?
  2. If she did breach her contract did D suffer recoverable damages?

Rule:

A health danger will not excuse nonperformance of a contractual obligation when the danger is caused by the nonperforming party. Nor will a health condition that was foreseeable when the contract was entered justify its breach.

Damages for breach of contract are measured by the expectations of the parties.

Holding:

  1. D did breach her employment contract.
  2. P is entitled to have the benefit of its bargain restored and therefore is entitled to damages that occurred from the hiring of the more expensive replacement.

Rationale:

P cause her medical problems by choosing to live so far from D's place of work. There is also doubt that D resigned only for health reasons. She said she resented working there. Also she had had the blood pressure problem for at least 5 years prior. Long held that an employer may recover damages from an employee who has failed to perform an employment contract. P's additional cost unquestionably resulted from the breach. P neither expected nor wanted a more experienced replacement. D's breach forced the board to hire the replacement and in turn to pay a higher salary. Therefore D lost its benefit of its bargain. Because D had no alternative, and is expected to mitigate its damages, it hired the only available replacement at the higher cost.

Policy/Notes:

Dissent: No evidence that blood pressure would have improved if D had moved closer to P's workplace. So it is not relevant that the court held it was her choice to live so far away.