Becker Law Group, with offices in Pasadena and Alhambra, advises California businesses in contract drafting, dispute prevention, and commercial litigation. With decades of courtroom experience and strategic negotiation expertise, the firm helps business owners protect their rights, enforce agreements, and minimize risk when contractual disputes arise.
Contracts are the foundation of business relationships. In California, a legally enforceable contract generally requires:
Offer
Acceptance
Consideration (something of value exchanged)
Mutual consent and lawful purpose
A breach of contract occurs when one party fails to perform a material obligation without lawful excuse.
California recognizes both written and oral contracts, though written agreements are strongly preferred for evidentiary clarity and enforceability.
1. Material Breach
A substantial failure that defeats the purpose of the contract. This allows the non-breaching party to terminate the agreement and seek damages.
2. Minor (Partial) Breach
A less significant failure that does not destroy the contract’s core purpose. The injured party may recover damages but must still perform their obligations.
3. Anticipatory Breach
When one party clearly indicates—before performance is due—that they will not fulfill their obligations.
To succeed in a breach of contract claim in California, a business must prove:
A valid contract existed
The business performed its obligations (or was excused from performance)
The other party breached the contract
The breach caused measurable damages
Documentation is critical—emails, invoices, payment records, delivery confirmations, and written communications often determine the outcome.
Non-payment for goods or services
Vendor or supplier performance failures
Employment and executive agreements
Partnership or shareholder agreements
Real estate and lease disputes
Confidentiality and non-compete violations
1. Compensatory Damages
Designed to place the injured party in the position they would have been in had the contract been performed.
2. Consequential Damages
Lost profits or secondary losses reasonably foreseeable at contract formation.
3. Specific Performance
A court order requiring the breaching party to fulfill contractual obligations (common in real estate cases).
4. Liquidated Damages
Pre-agreed damages provisions if reasonable and enforceable under California law.
5. Attorney’s Fees
Recoverable only if provided by contract or statute.
Punitive damages are generally not available for breach of contract alone unless fraud or other tort claims are involved.
Written contracts: 4 years
Oral contracts: 2 years
Fraud-related claims: Typically 3 years (subject to discovery rules)
Failing to act within these deadlines may bar recovery.
Businesses should conduct an early cost-benefit analysis considering:
Strength of documentary evidence
Amount in dispute
Litigation cost and timeline
Impact on ongoing relationships
Contractual mediation or arbitration clauses
In many cases, strategic negotiation or mediation may achieve faster, cost-effective results.
Preserve all communications and documentation immediately.
Review the contract carefully, including dispute resolution clauses.
Avoid unilateral termination without legal review.
Seek early legal evaluation to assess risk and leverage.
Consider mediation before initiating litigation.
Breach of contract disputes can significantly disrupt business operations and cash flow. California law provides clear remedies—but success depends on documentation, strategic planning, and timely action. Becker Law Group’s bilingual, litigation-ready team helps businesses enforce agreements, resolve disputes efficiently, and protect long-term enterprise value.
Sources:
California Civil Code (Contract Law)
California Code of Civil Procedure §337–339 (Statute of Limitations)
Judicial Council of California — Contract Litigation Guidelines
Becker Law Group Business Litigation Resources