United States Naval Institute v. Charter Communications, Inc.

United States Naval Institute v. Charter Communications, Inc., 936 F.2d 692 (Second Cir. 1991) is a U.S. federal court case. A contract case, it discusses the impropriety of punitive damages and favoring the theory of efficient breach.

Case procedure and summary

U.S. Naval Institute, as the assignee for the book The Hunt for Red October, sued Charter Communications and Berkley Publishing Group for breach of a licensing contract.

Holding

No. Damages for breach of contract are supposed to compensate the injured party for the loss caused by the breach. Those are measured by the plaintiff's actual loss.

The object behind contract remedies is to compensate, not to punish. Punitive damages are only recoverable from a breach of contract if the conduct that constitutes the breach is also a tort [Subsection 355, Restatement (Second) of Contracts].


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