Question: Soden, a contractor, made a contract to build a house for Clevert. The sales contract stated that if either party defaults in the performance of
Soden, a contractor, made a contract to build a house for Clevert. The sales contract stated that “if either party defaults in the performance of this contract,” that party would be liable to the other for attorneys’ fees incurred in suing the defaulter. Soden was 61 days late in completing the contract, and some of the work was defective. In a suit by the buyer against the contractor, the contractor claimed that he was not liable for the buyer’s attorneys’ fees because he had made only a defective performance and because “default” in the phrase quoted meant “nonperformance of the contract.” Was the contractor liable for the attorneys’ fees? [Clevert v Soden, 400 SE2d 181 (Va)]
Step by Step Solution
3.42 Rating (158 Votes )
There are 3 Steps involved in it
Yes The word default is to be given its ordinary usual meaning in ... View full answer
Get step-by-step solutions from verified subject matter experts
Document Format (1 attachment)
131-L-B-L-C (900).docx
120 KBs Word File
