Ucc 1-103
Ucc 1-103
Volume 18
Article 2
Issue 4 Number 4
4-1-1977
Recommended Citation
Robert A. Hillman, Construction of the Uniform Commercial Code: UCC Section 1-103 and "Code" Methodology, 18 B.C.L. Rev. 655
(1977), http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/bclr/vol18/iss4/2
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CONSTRUCTION OF THE UNIFORM
COMMERCIAL CODE: UCC SECTION 1-103
AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
ROBERT A. HILLMAN*
5 Patterson, supra note 4, at 57. See generally Diamond, Codification of the Law of
Contract, 31 Moo. L. REV. 361, 372-75 (1968). One Code proponent noted that:
The Code is an effort to break up (the Uniform Acts), to modernize
them to put them into a coherent'and accessible form, to add to them a
large body of material that should have been put into them before but has
not, and to clarify the frequent case law disputes that have arisen.
Llewellyn, Why a Commercial Code? 22 TENN. L. REv. 779, 779 (1953).. For a discussion
of the Uniform Acts see note 7 infra.
a Patterson, supra note 4, at 58.
Id. This is essentially what destroyed the usefulness of the original attempts at
unification of commercial law through statutory enactment, the Uniform Acts. (The
Uniform Acts may be found in UNIFORM LAWS ANNOTATED.) Courts viewed them
merely as restatements of the common law which they were free to construe in accord
with their own previous common law interpretations. Gilmore, supra note 1, at 1044.
Eventually, through case law interpretation, the Uniform Acts took on different mean-
ing in each jurisdiction. For example, by 1940, eighty out of one hundred ninety-eight
sections of the Negotiable Instruments Act, were construed differently by different
jurisdictions. See Schnader, Why the Commercial Code Should Be Uniform, 20 WASH. & LEE
L. REV. 237, 239 (1963). But see Beutel, The Proposed Uniform Commercial Code As a Prob-
lem in Codification, 16 Law & Contemn. Prob. 141, 141 (1951), indicating that under the
Uniform Laws "substantial uniformity of legislation" was accomplished. For a general
discussion of the original attempts at unification of commercial law through statutory
enactment see Braucher, The Legislative History of the Uniform Commercial Code, 58 COLON.
L. REv, 798, 799 (1958).
B One commentator noted that:
"a code is intended to replace the earlier common law, How can one ensure that the
judges, brought up on the common law and familiar with it, will wipe out their know-
ledge of the cases from their memories and concentrate on the statutory words?"
Diamond, supra note 5, at 375.
The failure of the courts to utilize the Uniform Acts in solving commercial dis-
putes justifiably fueled the arguments of Code opponents. Under the Uniform Laws,
courts schooled in judicial conservatism, returned to case law for dispute determination.
See Murray, "Under the Spreading Analogy of Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial
Code" 39 FORDHAM L. REV. 447, 448 (1971).
D Other problems anticipated by Code critics were that: Code language would be
wedded to historic meanings derived from common law, Patterson, supra note 4, at 60;
and that Code language would be "open-ended" and therefore not interpreted uni-
formly, id. at 63, & SUMMERS, supra note 3, at 7.
"'See D. KING, THE NEW CONCEPTUALISM OF THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE8-9
(1968). "Major portions of ... uniform acts were ... eroded away or unduly encum-
bered with judicial idiosyncrasies and failure to grasp the underlying policies of pro-
visions in those statutes .... It is against this type of danger which the Code must be
protected."
656
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
" Hawkland, supra note 1, at 299. See King, supra note 10, at 5-6. "True code"
and "true code methodology" are terminology borrowed from Professor Hawkland.
Hawkland, supra note 1, at 292-93.
The distinction sometimes made between "interpretation" of a statute (determin-
ing the meaning of the language), and "construction" of a statute (the process of appli-
cation of the statute to a given case after the meaning of the words is ascertained) is not
emphasized here. The boundaries between the two concepts are often unclear. See F. de
Sloovere, Preliminary Questions in Statutory Interpretation, 9 N.Y.U. L. Q. 407, 407 - 10
(1932); Berne!, Interpretation, Construction and Revision of the Commercial Code: The Pre-
sumption of Holding in Due Course, 1966 1A7AsIi. U. L.Q. 381, 386 - 89.
Hawkland, supra note 1, at 292; King, supra note 10, at 9. A true code "dis-
places all other law in its subject area save only that which the code excepts" and
"form[s] an interlocking, integrated body, revealing its own plan and containing its own
methodology." A true code "is comprehensive in that it is sufficiently inclusive and in-
dependent to enable it to be administered in accordance with its own basic policies."
Hawkland, supra note 1, at 292 (footnote omitted).
" King, supra note 10, at 9. The proponents of "true code methodology" realized
that the Code could not be all-inclusive," supersed[ing] all prior uncodified law dealing
with [the subject matter and includ[ing] ... all of the taw on [the] subject matter." Pat-
terson, supra note 4, at 67; Hawkland, ,supra note I, at 309. But Professor Hawkland
pointed Out that even the civil law, from which true code methodology is derived, is no
longer concerned with completeness because attention is on developing "systematic
methodology" to fill in the gaps. Id. at 309. By developing a similar methodology the
Code could be comprehensive without being pre-emptive. Id, at 309-10. True code
methodology proponents therefore believed that the Code should he its own best evi-
dence of what it means. See id. at 310.
The notion that gaps should be filled by reference to Code principles instead of
by resort to case law was considered a "radical departure" for a common law country.
Diamond, supra note 5, at 378-79. Common law jurisprudential tradition would not
permit such an idea to be taken seriously. Id. at 379, citing 1 G. GiustoRt, SEctituTv
INTERESTS IN PERSONAL PROPERTY VIII (1965). See also Gilmore, if rtie/e 9: What It Does
the Past, 26 LA. L. REv. 285, 285-86 (1966). But see Beutel,.supra note 11, at 388, quoting
Pound, Common Law and Legislation, 21 HAM'. L. REV. 383, 385.86 (1908). Dean Pound
suggested that legislation which supplied not only the rule to be applied, but the "prin-
ciple Irian which to reason," would be superior to judge-made rules and wo uld be the
methodology or the future. Pound, supra, at 385-86.
' 4 King, supra note 10, at 9. One commentator has stated:
A 'code,' ... is a legislative enactment which entirely pre-erupts the field
and which is assumed to carry within it the answers to all possible ques-
tions: thus when a court comes to a gap or an unforeseen situation, its
duty is to find, by extrapolation and analogy, a solution consistent with the
policy of the codifying law; the pre-Code common law is no longer avail-
able as an authoritative source.
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BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
16 M. at 303; Franklin, On the Legal Method of the Uniform Commercial Code, 16 LAw
& CONTENIP, PROB. 330, 333 (1951). See also King, „Capra note 10, at 10-11.
" Franklin, supra note 16, at 333.
" Hawkland, supra note I, at 303, quoting Franklin, supra note 16, at 333.
" Hawkland, supra note I, at 311. See note 13 supra.
20 The drafters of the Code may have felt that certain matters would better de-
velop by case law determination. For example, the extension of warranties to persons
other than the direct parties of a contract was purposefully left to the case law. The of-
ficial comment to § 2-313'states:
(The warranty sections of the Article are not designed in any way to dis-
turb those lines of case law growth which have recognized that warranties
need not be confined either to sates contracts or to the direct parties to
such a contract ... the matter is left to the case law with the intention that
the policies of this Act may offer useful guidance in dealing with further
cases as they arise.
U.C.C. § 2-313, Comment 2. See U.C.C. 2-318, Comment 3; cf, Hawkland supra note 1
at 311-12; Schlesinger, Study of Uniform Commercial Code Article 5, in NEW YORK LAW
REVISION COMMISSION, REPORT OF THE LAW REVISION COMMISSION FOR 1955: 3 S . ronv OF
THE UNIFORM COM.MERCIAl. CODE 1575, 1718-19 (1955).
6.58
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
article to refer to both principles of law and equity which, under the merged system
and with the exception of a few jurisdictions, are administered in one court.
24 Not all cases discussed in this article specifically cite § 1-103 as authority for
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BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
the proposition that they may refer to common law. Nevertheless, it is assumed that the
section is implicitly applied when common law is invoked.
25 It is recognized, of course, that many of the cases contain some aspects of each
kind of construction problem and, thus, do not fall neatly into categories. In addition,
no effort has been made to categorize the cases by Articles of the Code. It is the posi-
tion here that the problems discussed are common to all Articles.
26 For a catalogue of some of these changes, see, e.g., King. supra note 10 at
20-98; Mooney, Old Kontrad Principles and Karl's New Kode: An Essay on the Jurisprudence
of Oar New Commercial Law, 11 V ILL L. Rev. 213 (1966).
27 See, e.g., United States v. Wyoming Nat'l Bank, 505 F.2d 1064, 1068 (10th Cir.
1974) (seller's right of reclamation under U.C.C. § 2-702(2) "eliminates any common
law claim by a defrauded seller."); Glenn Dick Equip. Co. v. Galey Constr. Inc., —
Idaho 541 P.2d 1184, 1193 n.10 (1975) (recognizing that in U.C.C. § 2-316 (2) &
(3) the Code placed limits on the doctrine of caveat emptor when buyer inspects, while
at common law when buyer inspected no implied warranties would arise); Blue Rock
Indus. v. Raymond Intl, Inc., 325 A.2d 66, 75 (Me. 1974) (contract enforceable al-
though no precise measurement of price included in contract under U.C.C. § 2-204,
which sanctions agreements although terms are left open); Sunshine v. Bankers Trust
Co., 34 N.Y.2d 404, 414 & n.6, 314 N.E.2d 860, 866 & n.6, 358 N.Y.S.2c1 113, 122 &
n.6 (1974) (U.C.C. § 4-407 conferred on a payor bank the substantive rights of sub-
rogation even if the technical requirements of common law subrogation had not been
met).
660
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
22 See, e.g., Universal C.I,T. Credit Corp. v. Shepley, Ind. App. —, 329
N.E.2(1 620, 622 (1975) ("Although this is a case of tortious conversion the parties can-
not, simply by bringing a suit in tort, ignore the fact that the contract here involved
was one subject to the Uniform Commercial Code."); Franklin Nat'l Bank v. Eurez
Constr. Corp., 60 Misc. 2d 499, 301 N.Y.S. 2t1 845 (Sup. Ct. 1969). The Franklin case is
discussed in text at notes 206-14 infra,
22 F„g„ William B. Tanner Co. v. W100, Inc., 528 F.2d 262, 270 (3rd Cir. 1975).
See Glenn Dick Equip. Co. v. Galey Constr. Inc., — Idaho —, 54l P.2(1 1184,
1192-94 (1975).
an See note 7 supra for a discussion of the Uniform Acts.
" 297 F.2d 497 (1st Cir. 1962).
32 Id. at 998-99.
33 Id. at 500.
34 U.C.C. § 2-207 changes the common law offer and acceptance rule that a re-
sponse to an offer which is not precisely in accord with the offer is not an acceptance
b u t a counter offer—the so-called "mirror image rule." The section states in part: "A
definite and seasonable expression of acceptance or a written confirmation which is
sent within a reasonable time operates as an acceptance even though it states terms ad-
ditional to or different from thime offered or agreed upon ...." U.C.C. § 2-207(1).
U.C.C. § 2.207(2) provides that additional terms such as the warranty disclaimer are to
be considered as "proposals for additions to the contract" and 2-207(2)(b) indicates that
the proposals drop out of the contract when they "materially alter it." The court ac-
knowledged in its opinion that the Code changed the common law mirror-image rule
and that the clause in question materially altered the offer, but without explanation
(other than that such an approach applied io the case would he "absurd") said that the
Code approach could not be extended to the instant facts. 297 F.2d at 499-500. This
deliberate rejection of explicit Code provisions has been widely criticized. E.g., W HITE &
SustmEasst(pm note 3, at 26-27; Note, 76 Haiti. L. Rev. 1481, 1482-84 (1963).
There are other examples of courts failing to follow express language of the
Code and applying outside law instead. One such example is the use of the concept of
"recission" by courts, a concept which has largely been rejected by the Code. The word
"recission" at common law had at least four separate meanings. WlirrE&Susisials,svpra
note 3, at 248. The term was used to refer to what is now rejection or revocation of ac-
ceptance under the Code; a buyer's act in returning goods; a buyer's cancellation of an
661
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
executory term of a contract; and a buyer's cause of action for fraud. Id; cf. Mooney,
supra note 26, at 238 n.36. To avoid the ambiguities that the use of such a concept
would entail the Code has largely eliminated the principle and substituted for it new
concepts—rejection and revocation of acceptance. See U.C.C. § 2-608, Comment 1
which states that § 2-608
no longer speaks of "rescission," a term capable of ambiguous application
either to transfer of title to the goods or to the contract of sale and suscep-
tible also of confusion with cancellation for cause of an executed or ex-
ecutory portion of the contract. The remedy under this section is instead
referred to simply as "revocation of acceptance" of goods tendered under
a contract for sale and involves no suggestion of "election" of any sort.
See also Mooney, supra note 26, at 238 n. 36.
Common law rescission has been preempted except, apparently, when there has
been "mistake, fraud, or the like." WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 3, at 248-49. See U.C.C.
§ 2-721 & accompanying Comment. Unfortunately courts have employed rescission, re-
jection, and revocation of acceptance terminology interchangeably, and apparently have
failed to understand the intricacies of revocation of acceptance. WHITE & summERs. supra
note 3, at 249 n. 10. See, e.g., Sarnecki v. Al Johns Pontiac, 3 U.C.C. REP. SERV. 1121
(Pa. C. P. Luzerne County 1966) (court used the term rescission throughout the opinion
to refer to a revocation of acceptance); Moore v. Howard Pontiac-American, Inc., —
Tenn. App. — 492 S.W.2d 227, 229 (1973) (relief sought was "rescission under
[U.C.C. §1 2-608"); DeCoria v. Red's Trailer Mart, Inc., 5 Wash. App. 892, 491 P.2d
241, (1971) (Neither parties nor judge at trial court level treated the case as one con-
trolled by the Code. On appeal the term rescission was used throughout the opinion
but no mention was made of U.C.C. § 2-608 and there apparently was no fraud in-
volved).
Occasionally, a court has been more mindful of Code terminology. In Perfor-
mance Motors, Inc. v. Allen, 280 N.C. 385, 186 S.E.2d 161 (1972), the court held that
buyer was permitted to revoke acceptance of a mobile home and recover damages even
though she asked for rescission only. The court stated: "We need not now decide
whether a buyer may still obtain a judicial rescission of the contract by virtue of pre-
Code concepts of law or equity which have not been displaced...." Id. at 396, 186
S.E.2d at 167. The court went on to find that buyer's "allegation of 'rescission' [would]
be given effect ... as an allegation of 'revocation of acceptance' since that Code concept
more nearly reflect[ed] the claims asserted" by the buyer. Id.
35- Pa. Super. Ct. —, 335 A.2d 725 (1975).
36 Id. at —, 335 A.2d at 735.
662
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE - METHODOLOGY
suit reached by the majority." If courts facing similar issues have two
avenues to justify their results—Code and outside law, the latter per-
vaded by jurisdictional variations—the result of resorting to the out-
side law will be to engender confusion and perhaps disparity in
commercial law, thereby eroding the mandate for simplicity and uni-
formity embodied in the Code.'"
Why do courts resist express Code language? Some courts, like
their predecessors construing the Uniform Acts, seemingly are unwill-
ing to accept Code change because of "preconceived idea[si of end
results which end results formerly followed under pre-Code law." 9 t
Other courts may simply misunderstand Code directives. 42 Still other
courts have found that in some instances strict adherence to express
language will result in unreasonable decisions contrary to the basic
goals and policies of the Code. Accordingly, in recognition of the
31' The concurring opinion stated that it "would not base the resolution of the
case upon § 1-103 and principles of equity ... because § 3-419(3) expressly mandates
the result reached in this case." — Pa. Super. Ct. at —, 335 A.2d at 738.
4 " There are other examples of courts Unnecessarily invoking common law rather
than resting their holding on relevant Code provisions. In Glenn Dick Equip. Co. v.
Daley Constr. Inc., — Idaho —, 541 P.2d 1184, (1975), the court stated that the
Code parol evidence rule: "is not necessarily a statement of the ... rule distinct from
the common law; rather, the drafters of the code ... intended to incorporate the com-
mon law relevant. to the rule unless the common law was .specifically excluded." Id. at.
—, 541 P.2d at 1191 (emphasis added). In in re Hardin, 458 F.2d 938, 940 (7th Cir.
1972), the cou rt. held that a financing agency which had an unperfected security in-
terest may not exercise seller's right of reclamation under § 2-702. The court construed
the "particular seller" language of 2-702(2) ("111f misrepresentation of solvency has been
made to the particular seller ... the 10-day limitations [for reclamation] does not ap-
ply,") to mean that the drafters intended to continue the common law requirement of
reliance on the misrepresentation. Id. at 940-41. The court simply could have indicated
that the financing agency was not a seller under § 2-702 and noted, as it did, that a re-
sult in favor of the financing agency would have circumvented the tiling requirements
of Article 9. See id, at 941. There was no need to invoke outside law. In Guida v. Ex-
change Nat'l Bank of 'Yampa, 308 So.2d 148, 152 (Fla. Dist. Ct.. App. 1975), the court
resorted to common law to substantiate its conclusion under § 3-006 that where a se-
cured party impairs its collateral its rights are limited against the debtor.
4 ' Welsh, Judicial interpretations of the Filing Requirements Under Article Nine of the
Code, 37 TENN. L. RE v. 273, 333 (1970). See also cases cited in note 40 supra.
Section 1-103 may be simply too great an invitation to jurists to continue their
past pattern of resisting change. The failure of the previous attempts at uniformity in
the commercial area due to judicial unwillingness or inability to follow the spirit of the
reforms, see note 7 supra, does not suggest that courts, faced with the dilemma of
whether to choose Code purposes and policies or conflicting common law in Ctxle prob-
lent solving, will choose the former. Where the Code contains gaps, ambiguities and
contradictions, it is much easier for courts to apply the common law rules with which
they are familiar than to find solutionS by analogy or from the purposes and policies of
the code which contain many novel ideas.
41 See Double-E Sportswear Corp. v. Girard Trust Bank, 488 F.2d 292, 296 & n.4
(3rd Cir. 1973), where the majority appears to have misconstrued waiver under §
2-209(4), holding that the section provides for waiver of the statute of frauds, rather
than a waiver of the individual contract term at issue,
To sonic extent, of course, a court's erroneous conclusions may be the result of
unsatisfactory Code drafting. See notes 133.49 & accompanying text infra; R. Smiim,
R. SUMMERS & J, WittrE, COMMERCIAL AND CONSUMER LAW 44-54 (2d ed. 1974).
663
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
664
UGC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
41 "A person 'knows' or has 'knowledge' of' a fact when he has actual knowledge
debts of seller and provides an additional 30 days from the date of notice to creditors
fin- additional creditors to come forward and assert claims, mitigates the harshness of §
6-104(3). However, some jurisdictions like New York have not enacted § 6-106. See Ad-
rian Tabin Corp. v, Climax Boutique, Inc., 34 N.Y.2d 210, 215.16, 313 N.E.2d 66, 69,
356 N.Y.S.2d 606, 610 (1974).
" 34 N.Y.2d at 216, 313 N.E.2d at 69, 356 N.Y.S.2d at 610. The court was aware
of the policies it disregarded: "We recognize that strong reasons grounded in public
policy and in the equities of the situation can be raised as a basis for imposing a duty of
careful inquiry upon the transferee of a hulk sale." Id.
"See text accompanying note 2 I supra.
665
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
tency also arises from the fact that section 1-103 may be potentially
invoked in a wide variety of situations, ranging from complete Code
silence to incomplete Code treatment, to broad or ambiguous use of
terminology by the Code framers. This section will explore the man-
ner in which courts have "supplemented" the Code through the
common law where it has not been "displaced."
1. Code Silence
"See, e.g„ Universal Credit Corp. v. State Farm Mut. Auto, ins. Co., 493
S.W.2d 385, 390 (Mo. App. 1973) (auctioneer liable for breacb of implied warranty of
title unless name of principal is disclosed); Leaderbrand v. Central State Bank, 202 Kan.
450, 453, 450 P.2d 1, 4-5 (1969) (the court, citing § 1-103, found that law relative to
principal and agent supplemented the provisions of § 3-403).
Other common law and equitable principles, besides rules governing principal
and agent, which are specifically cited by § 1-103 as supplementing the Code when not
displaced and which are commonly employed by courts, include capacity to contract, see,
e.g., Warwick Municipal Employees Credit Union v. McAllister, 110 R.I. 399, 293 A.2d
516 (1972) (court relied on common law to resolve the issue and did not refer to the
code); misrepresentation, see, e.g, Ins. Co. of North Am. v. Brehn, 478 P.2d 387 (Ore.
1970) (same); duress, see, e.g., Austin Instrument Inc. v. Loral Corp., 29 N.Y.2d 124,
130-31, 272 N.E.2d 533, 535-36, 324 N.V.S.2d 22, 25-26 (1971) (same); mistake, see,
e.g., Braund Inc. v, White, 486 P.2d 50, 56 (Alas. 1971) (same); bankruptcy, see, e.g.,
Wirth v. Heavey, 508 S.W.2d 263, 266 (Mo. 1974) (same); fraud, see, e.g., City Dodge,
Inc. v. Gardner, 232 Ga. 766, 768-69, 208 S.E.2d 794, 796-97 (1974) (same); and
estoppel, which may be the most frequently invoked common law principle under the
Code, see, e.g., United States v. Gleaners & Farmers Coop. Elevator Co., 314 F. Supp.
1148, 1149 (N.D. Ind. 1970), affil, 481 F.2d 104 (7th Cir. 1973); Multiplastics, Inc. v.
Arch Indus. Inc., 166 Conn. 280, 285, 348 A.2d 618, 621 (1974); Manson State Bank v.
Diamond, 227 N.W.2d 195, 200-01 (Iowa 1975); Del Hayes & Sons, Inc. v. Mitchell,
— Minn. —, 230 N.W.2d 588 (1975) (dictum); Central Nat'l Bank & Trust Co. v.
666
UGC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
One example of the use of common law when the Code is com-
pletely silent is found in Ebasco Services, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Power &
Light Co." In that case PP & L, a public utility which furnished elec-
tric power to large areas of Pennsylvania, decided to increase its
generating capacity by building an additional generating plant." Ac-
cordingly, it hired Ebasco Services, Inc. (Ebasco) as a contractor to
undertake complete responsibility for construction of the plant. 63
Ebasco, in turn, gave the General Electric Company (GE) a subcon-
tract in 1964 to supply the steam turbine generator and boiler feed
pump which were to be the heart 'of the power plant." One of the
terms of the subcontract which was the subject of negotiation for
three years was a limitation of GE's liability should the equipment
malfunction." Finally, in 1967 an agreement with such a limitation
was reached." Eventually the equipment did malfunction and PP & L
had to spend a great deal of money purchasing replacement power
from other power companies." In a subsequent suit PP & L asserted
Community Bank & Trust Co., 528 P.2d 710, 713 (Okla. 1974); Sacred Heart Farmers
Coop Elev. v. Johnson, — Minn. —, 232 N,W.2d 921, 923 (1975).
The list in § 1-103 of supplemental common law and equitable principles was not
meant to be exhaustive, as discussed in text supra at note 21. Other common law rules
have often been employed by courts to resolve problems when the Code is completely
silent. Such common law principles include waiver, see, e.g., Kane v. American Nat'l
Bank & Trust Co., 21 111. App. 3d 1046, 1051-52, 316 N.E.2d 177, 182 (1974); Multi-
plastics, Inc. v. Arch Indus, Inc„ 166 Conn: 280, 285, 348 A.2c1 618, 621 (1974), and
conversion, see, e.g., Yaeger & Sullivan Inc. v. Farmers Bank, — Ind. App, 317
N.E.2d 792, 797 (1974).
In addition, other equitable principles have been commonly employed in Code
resolution. See, e.g., In re ,J.V . Gleason Co., 452 F.2d 1219, 1222, (8th Cir. 1971) (sure-
ty's right to equitable lien and equitable subrogation in construction contract cases ex-
cepted from Article 9); McAtee v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co., 401 F. Supp. 11,
14 (N.D. Fla. 1975) ("[T]he doctrine of equitable subrogation in suretyship cases does
not create a security interest under the Code and has not been displaced or controlled
by Article 9."); Kupka v. Morey, 541 P.2d 740, 750 (Alas. 1975), (the Code's parol evi-
dence rule held inapplicable in an action for reformation); Urdang v. Muse, 114 N.J.
Super. 372, 380-81, 276 A.2d 397, 402 (1971) (Retail installment seller would not accept
$900 from buyer when only $319 due in default. The court held that equity intervened
so that buyer would not be required to pay the deficiency when goods were resold.)
One commentator has indicated that § 1-103 is "broad enough" to make the construc-
tive trust and equitable lien available under the Code, Nordstrom, Restitution an Default
and Article Twn of the U.C.C., 19 VANn. L. REV.' 1143, 1162 & n. 79 (1966).
Procedural questions have also been resolved by reference to outside law. See,
e.g., Ziebart v. Kalenze, 238 N.W.2d 261, 266-67 (N.D. 1975); Bank of America v. Se-
curity Pacific Nat'l Bank, 23 Cal. App. 3d 638, 642, 100 Cal. Reptr. 438, 441 (1972).
For additional cases in which courts have invoked common law and equitable principles
through § 1-103 see I ANDERSON, ANDERSON ON TILE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL. CODE § 1-103
(2d ed. 1970).
61 402 F. Supp. 421 (E,D. Pa. 1975).
62 1d. at 424.
" Id.
" Id. at 425.
65 Id. at 426, 428-29.
"Id. GE was successful in limiting its liability for damages to the contract price.
Id. at 429.
" Id. at 425.
667
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
668
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
'" The court reasoned as follows: "BeCause [2-207] is inapplicable, we apply tradi-
tional offer-acceptance analysis and find that the 'estimate' language constituted a
counter-offer because of the variation in terms." Id. at 787, 214 SE.2d at 358. See also J,
WHITE & R. SUMMERS, UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE 6 (1972) [hereinafter cited as WHITE
& SUMMERS]. Another case in which a court resorted to common law contract prinCiples
was Admiral Plastics Corp. v. Trueblood Inc., 436 F.2d 1335 (6th Cir. 1971), where the
court found that the lack of progress in the performance of a sales contract was the re-
sult of both parties' delinquencies. The court reasoned that since the Code had no rem-
edy for "mutual breach" the issue of whether the buyer could get his deposit back was
determined by common law. Id. at 1338-39. Other principles which are apparently
partly governed by express Code language and partly by reference to common law via §
1-103 include mitigation of damages, see, e.g., Chicago Roller Skate Mfg. Co. v. Sokol
Mfg. Co., 185 Neb. 515, 517-18, 177 N.W.2c1 25, 26 (1970) (The court applied both
Code principles and common law principles in determining the proper amount of dam-
ages in a breach of contract suit); accord, Wurlitzer Co, v. Oliver, 334 F. Stipp. 1009,
1011-12 (W.D. Pa. 1971). See generally Hillman, Keeping the Deal Together After Material
Breach—Common Law Mitigation Rules, The UGC', and the Restatement (Second) of Contracts,
47 Cow. L. REV. 553 (1976); and assignment, see, e.g., Centennial State Bank v. S.E.K.
Const, Co., 518 S.W.2d 143, 147 (Mo. App. 1974) (The court used the common law
principles of assignment in conjunction with § 9-504(1)(a) stating that "Mlle law of as-
signment remains in full force and effect as applied to the Code, since there is no pro-
vision in the Code abrogating or modifying the general law concerning assignments.")
For additional cases applying common law and equitable principles to the Code
through § 1-103, see I ANDERSON UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE § 1-103 (2d ed. 1970).
See cases cited in note 81 infra. The problem caused by "gaps" was anticipated
by Code draftsmen: "Orie of the nightmares of a Code draftsmen, as of the lawyers,
who will have to live with and work under his product, is that gaps will be found in it,
as revealed by the presentation in controversy or litigation of a case ...." Patterson, The
Codification of Commercial Law in the Light of furispnalence, in NEW YORK LAw REVISION
COMMISSION, REPORT OF THE LAW REVISION COMMISSION FOR 1955: 1 STUDY OF THE UNI-
FORM COMMERCIAL COM:, 51, 70 (1955) [hereinafter cited as Patterson].
" See, e.g., Investment Serv. Co. v. Martin Bros. Container & Timber Prods.
Corp., 255 Ore. 192, 200, 465 P.2d 868, 871 (1970) ("[T]he specification of one excep-
tion [to a rule] leads to a construction of the entire statute that no other exceptions to
the requirement ... are intended."); Seattle-First Nat'l Bank v. Oregon Pac, Indus.,
Inc., 262 Ore. 578, 580-81, 500 P.2d 1033, 1034 (1972):
One of the prime purposes of the Code was to create a statutory
scheme incorporating within its provisions the complete regulation of cer-
tain types of commercial dealings. This purpose would be blunted if the
rules created by some precode decisions and not expressly provided for in
the statutory scheme were nevertheless grafted onto the Code by implica-
tion.
See also Philadelphia Nat'l Bank v. Irving R. Boody Co., I U.C.C. REP. SERV. 560, 568-69
(1963) (Funk, Arb.)
669
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
When that conclusion is not rebutted, these courts have not permitted
reintroduction of the principle, rule or exception through section
1 103. The decision in Philadelphia Bond & Mortgage Co. v. High-
-
cial Code and Statutmy Remnants, 17 Bus. L. 309 (1962), where the author points out that
although repeal by implication is not favored, it may be inferred that there was a repeal
of statutes relating to the same subject matter since the Code was "intended as a unified
coverage of its subject matter." Id. at 315-16,
" 261 Md. 116, 274 A.2d 113 (1970).
337 (D.V.I. 1975) ("IAIn enumeration by the Code of acts which constitute a conversion
is not exclusive, and the general principles of taw relating to the conversion of property
remain in force."); Hills Bank & Trust Co. v. Arnold Cattle Co., 22 III. App. 3d 138,
140, 316 N.E.2d 669, 671 (1974) (the omission of an Article 9 cause of action against a
third party for the conversion of property upon which another holds a security interest
does not preclude a common law remedy); Salesman v. Nat'l Community Bank, 102
N.J. Super. 482, 492-93, 246 A.2d 162, 168 (1968) (enumeration of specific acts con-
stituting a conversion in § 3-919(1) not exclusive for a finding of conversion.).
" 3 296 &.a1 32 (Fla. 1974).
"4 /d. at 34.
" 5 U.C.C. § 9-312(4) & (5) as enacted by Florida provided in part:
(4) A purchase money security interest in collateral other than in-
ventory has priority over a conflicting security interest in the same collat-
eral if the purchase money security interest is perfected at the dine the
debtor receives possession of the collateral or within ten days thereafter.
(5) In all cases not governed by other rules stated in this section (in-
cluding cases of purchase money security interests which do not qualify for the spe-
cial priorities set forth in subsections (3) and (4) of this section), priority between
671
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
672
UGC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
673
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
" 1 See Fukie, Legislative Techniques and Problems in the Code, 3 NEw YORK LAW RE-
VISION COMMISSION, REPORT OF THE LAW REVISION CONIMISSION FOR 1055: 3 STUDY OF THE
UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE 2111, 2175 (1955), Hawkland, Uniform Commercial "Code"
Methodology, 1962 U. ILL L. F. 291, 305.
"2 Azevedo v. Minister, 86 Nev. 576, 579, 471 P.2d 661, 663 (1970) ("As with all
codifications, it was impossible for the Uniform Commercial Code to encompass every
conceivable factual situation. Realizing this limitation, its drafters couched much of the
language of the text and comments in broad generalities, leaving many problems to be
answered by future litigation.") See Hawkland, supra note 111, at 305.
"3 "This Act is drawn to provide flexibility so that ... it will provide its own ma-
" 6 Id. See WHITE & SLIMMERS, supra note 79, at 191 n.77, for a construction of
"other proper circumstances."
11 " 233 Ga. at 789, 214 S.E.2d at 359, citing R. NoansTRom, LAW OF SALES 158 at
479-80 (1970).
674
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
C.1.T. Credit Corp. v. Farmers Bank, 358 F. Supp. 317, 323-24 (E.D. Mo. 1973) (the
court concluded that proceeds are "identifiable" if they can be traced in accordance
with the state law governing the transactions. Id. at 324).
"1' Another example of a court invoking common law when Code language is
broad is found in Aldon Indus., Inc. v. Don Myers & Assoc., Inc, 517 F.2d 188 (5th
Cir. 1975). In Aldon Indus. the court considered a claim by buyer for consequential
damages resulting from seller's delivery of defective carpeting. Id. at 190. Buyer had in-
stalled the carpeting in a number of school districts and argued that its ability to sell
additional carpeting had been "severely impaired." Id. at 191. The court noted that
U.C.C. § 2-714(3) states that in a "proper case" consequential damages may be re-
covered, but the Code does not define a "proper case" for awarding consequential
damages. Citing Si 1-103, the court looked to common law to determine that consequen-
tial damages were too speculative to warrant recovery. 517 F.2d at 190. U.C.C. §
2-715(2) defines consequential damages as including "any loss resulting from general
675
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
, requirements and needs of which the seller at the time of contracting had reason to
know and which could not reasonably be prevented by cover ...."
In For an example of a court adopting such an approach see Azevedo v. Minis-
ter, 86 Nev. 576, 471 P.2d 661 (1970). There the court recognized in determining a
"reasonable time" under §§ 2-201(2) and 1-204(2) that the Code's purposes and policies
must be consulted. 86 Nev. at 583-84, 471 P.2d at 666.
' 3 ' See note 6 supra and accompanying text.
1 " One commentator has stated:
The Code ... is devoid of the uniformity it prescribes fur the substance of
the law. The language is now clear, now mud; now grammatical now illit-
erate; now consistent, now inconsistent slapdash and slovenly. It wallows in
definition that does not define and definition that misleads—definition for
the sake of forgotten definition. It includes many ways of saying the same
thing, and many ways of saying nothing.
Mellinkoff, The Language of the Uniform Commercial Code, 77 YALE L.J. 185, 185 (1967).
See also Patterson, supra note 80, at 60.
133 See In re Federal's, Inc., 12 U.C.0 REP. SERV. 1142, 1444-45 (E.D. Mich. Bankr.
1973), affd, 402 F. Supp. 1357 1368 (E.D. Mich. 1975), and articles noted therein. 12
U.C.C. REP. SERV. at 1144 n.5.
134 See, e.g., Braucher, Reclamation of Goods from a Fraudulent Buyer, 1 UNIFORM
COMMERCIAL CODE L.J. 9 (1968); Hawkland, The Relative Rights of Lien Creditors and De-
frauded Sellers—Amending the Uniform Commercial Code to Conform to the Kravitz Case, 67
Com. L.J. 86 (1962)) Mann & Phillips, The Reclaiming Seller and the Bankruptcy Act: A
Roadmap of the Strategies, 18 B.C. 1ND. & Com. L. RE.v. — (1977); Shanker, Bankruptcy
and Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code, J. NAT'L ASS'N OF REF. IN BANKRurrcv 37,
42.43 (1966).
133 278 F.2d 820 (3d Cir. 1960).
676
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
"" Id. at 821. The pertinent portions of § 2.702 as enacted in Pennsylvania stated
that where a seller discovers the buyer to be insolvent he may, subject to the rights of a
buyer in ordinary course "or lien creditor under this Article (Section 2-403)," and
within ten days after receipt, reclaim any goods received by the buyer on credit. Pa.
Stat. Ann. tit. 12A, § 2-702 (Purdon), cited in 278 F.2d at 821.
127 278 F.2d at 821,
158 Id. See note 136 supra.
677
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
II CRITIQUE
The suggestions which will be made in this section for the usage
of section 1-103 in the resolution of Code construction problems are
based upon the assumption that the Code's purposes and policies
should be emphasized more heavily in determining both the meaning
of Code sections and the circumstances in which common law may be
invoked to supplement them. This section will first outline a priority
system for resolving Code construction problems. Next, this section
will examine the arguments which might preclude reliance on Code
purposes and policies and evaluate such arguments. The advantages
of the suggested priority system will then be discussed. Finally, the
priority system wilt be applied in the context of the various problem
areas described in part I of this article.
149 In In re Federal's, Inc., 12 UCC REV. SERV. 1142 (E.D. Mich. Bankr. 1973),
red, 402 F. Supp. 1357, (E.D. Mich. 1975), the referee in bankruptcy, noting the
Code's policy of uniformity and the absence of express language referring the court to
common law to resolve disputes between reclaiming sellers and lien creditors, stated
that "the most plausible assumption is that the drafters intended the rights of a reclaim-
ing seller as against a lien creditor to be determined solely by reference to the Code."
Id. at 1146-47. The referee, however, concluded that a prior case bound him to resolv-
ing the case via common law. Id. at 1148, citing In re Mel Go1de Shoes, Inc., 403 F.2d
658, 660 (6th Cir. 1968).
Professor Hawkland suggests that a resort to analogy when the Code is unclear
instead of to common law is. "sounder because it recognizes that policy considerations
which underlie the various code provisions are frequently transferable to analogous
situations ... , 1TIo draw on the common and statutory law involves the risk of resort-
ing to rules and principles which have become obsolete or have beets defeated by com-
peting policies." Hawkland, supra note 111, at 317.
' 5° For an explanation of this priority system, see text at notes 179-235 infra.
191 See text at notes 12-15 supra. The specific mandate of § 1-103 and the re-
cognition that the Code framers purposefully left some gaps for outside law supple-
mentation, make true code methodology, in which all answers to commercial problems
are found within the Code itself, an unrealistic approach.
678
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
left gaps. Common law should also be applied when the Code text is
hopelessly ambiguous or overly broad and where Code purposes and
policies also conflict or are vague.
Achievement of the goals of uniformity and improvement of the
commercial law through greater emphasis on Code purposes and
policies ultimately depends upon the extent to which the purposes
and policies are readily apparent and do not themselves conflict. One
valid criticism of the Code, in fact, is that Code purposes and policies
are sometimes conflicting and often times overly broad.' 52 Given the
wealth of Code purposes and policies, it has been suggested by one
commentator that any solution to a problem concerning a secured
transaction can find support in a policy advanced somewhere within
Article 9 of the Code.'" According to an interpretive approach which
emphasizes policy, therefore, courts would effectively remain free to
rely on their own diverse notions of "justice and fairness" to decide
difficult Code questions.'"
The criticism that purposes and policies are too general to aid in
construction gains most of its support from the nature of' the Code's
general policies—simplification, clarification, modernization, expan-
sion and uniformity—which are set forth in section l-102. 155 It is fair
to say, for example, that in many situations reasonable minds will dif-
fer as to what will simplify commercial law. Yet these broad policies
should not be abandoned completely in construing Code sections. Al-
though vague and unsatisfactory when applied to some problems, of-
tentimes these policies will prescribe the direction which should be
taken in construing a Code section. Consequently, when the broad
policies are vague and unhelpful they should be ignored, but when
they contribute to an understanding of a commercial problem they
should be utilized.'"
"2 See Bettie!, Interpretation, Construction, and Revision of the Commercial Code: The
Presumption of Bolding in Due Course, 1966 WASH. U. L.Q. 381, 391-92 n.56; 1). KING,
TIIE NEW Coyagrum.ism or TILE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE 11 (1968).
153 Bethel, supra note 152 at 391-92 n.56.
154 Id. at 391. It has been noted that "[Otte mandate to interpret the Code so as to
further its objective does not furnish any real guide to construction because the pur-
poses are of 'an essentially neutral nature' and 'a great deal will depend upon the van-
tage point of the one contemplating the problem.'" R. ANnERsoN, ANDERsoN ON THE
UNIFORM COMMERCIAL. Cont:: CUMULATI VE SUPPLEMENT 13 (2d ed. 1974), citing In re
Moore, 7 UCC REP. SERv, 578, 594 (I). Me. 1969).
To the extent that this criticism is true, Code policy is no greater aid in constru-
ing the Code than general canons of construction.
' 55See note 2 supra for the text of the relevant portion of'14 1-102.
155 For an example of a situation where the broad policies of' § 1-102 are helpful
that general policies in conjunction with the underlying policies of individual sections
"make the conceptualism practicable." Id. at 12.
157 See King ,supra note 152 at 11-14.
CISIONNIAKING (1976). Justice Holmes indicated that the "legislative intent" is a "re-
siduary clause intended to gather up whatever other aids there may be to interpretation
beside the particular words and the dictionary." Frankfurter, Some RefPalms on the
Reading if Statutes, 47 Ctil.um, L REv. 527, 538 (1947), citing a letter from Mr. Justice
Holmes. As such, Justice Frankfurter avoided the phrase in favor of the "aim" or "pol-
icy" of the legislation, which the judge must "seek and effectuate." Id. at 538-39. See also
Jones, The Plain Meaning Rule and Extrinsic Aids in the Interpretation of Federal Statutes, 25
WASH. U. 2 41939); P. RUST, PROCESSES OF CONSTITUTIONAL DECISIONMAKI NG 36-43
(1975).
I" Section 2-708(2) provides:
If the measure of damages provided in subsection (1) is inadequate to put
the seller in as good a position as performance would have done then the
measure of damages is the profit ... which the seller would have made
from full performance by the buyer, together with any incidental damages
provided in this Article ... due allowance for costs reasonably incurred
and due credit for payments or proceeds of resale.
' B1 30 N.Y.2d 393, 285 N.E.2d 311, 334 N.Y.S.2d 165 (1972).
680
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
681
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
pear to go beyond the express language of the text, and sometimes they restrict it.
WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 163, at 12. See Skilton, Some Comments on the Comments to
the Uniform Commercial Code, 1966 Wis. L. REV. 597, 621-30. Courts should be mindful
that the Comments should be utilized only to determine the objectives of the text itself.
"6 See WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 163, at 264.
" 7 U.C.C. § 2-712, Comment 2.
1 " WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 163 at 15.
682
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
683
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
This comment, however, does not appear in the final Official Text,
thus suggesting that the framers decided against a heavy emphasis on
finding equitable principles outside of the Code. 174 Finally, it simply
does not logically follow that merely because the Code makes refer-
ence to the use of outside law to supplement the Code, that the
Code's objectives—its purposes and policies—may be abandoned and
replaced by such law. Nor should canons of construction be substi-
tuted for the purposes and policies of the Code in determining the
meaning of Code language. For example, the canon that a statute ex-
pressly mentioning one exception to a principle is presumed to have
excluded other unmentioned exceptions 175 is no more than an at-
tempt to ascertain the meaning of the statute. It is submitted that
purposes and policies, whether explicit or underlying, are superior
evidence of that meaning.
Thus it has been shown that neither the argument that the
Code purposes and policies are too broad and conflicting for the
suggested methodology, nor the argument that section 1-103 pre-
cludes a system which gives purposes and policies priority over com-
mon law, is fatal to implementation of the methodology. Moreover,
there are advantages to this priority system which suggest that it
should be followed.
The lesson to be learned from prior attempts at codification is
that uniformity of commercial law is not possible if courts unhesitat-
ingly invoke common law in construing such legislation. 176 As one
commentator has pointed out, "free resort to outside law ... not only
makes possible the utilization of different analogies, but brings into
play different rules of law and social policies, inevitably reducing the
chances of uniform results." 177 While it is unrealistic to suggest that
courts inevitably will reach uniform results by emphasizing Code pur-
poses and policies in construing Code sections, such an approach
should reduce inconsistency. Similarly, a greater role for Code pur-
poses and policies should prove a more effective restraint on courts
seeking to reintroduce old complex rules which the Code has attempt-
ed to simplify and modernize. The attempted improvement of com-
mercial law as embodied in the Code cannot succeed if its reforms are
ignored in favor of common law approaches. Therefore, when prob-
lems in construction exist, courts should make a good faith effort to
find the Code mandate within the Code.'" It is submitted that such
"4 But see WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 163, at 10, and note 163 supra.
"5 See Investment Serv. Co. v. Martin Bros. Container & Timber Prods. Corp.,
255 Ore. 192, 200, 465 P.2d 868, 871 (1970).
116 See note 7 SUpro.
177 Flawkland, supra note 156, at 314.
1 " Some courts have recognized that uniformity and certainty demand that Code
policies take precedence in deciding cases. See In re Hardin, 8 UCC REP. SERV. 857,
861-62 (E.D. Wis. 1971), affd sub. nom. Shapiro v. Union Bank & Savings Co., 458 F.2d
938, 940 (7th Cir. 1972); Lincoln Bank Re Trust Co. v. Queenan, 344 S.W.2d 383, 385
(Ky. Ct. App. 1961).
689
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
When Code language is clear and consistent with its overall pur-
poses and policies, the court's mandate obviously is to apply the Code
rule rather than outside law."" It is less clear, however, what role, if
any, section 1-103 should play when express Code language and Code
purposes and policies conflict. As mentioned earlier, in recognition of
the Code mandate to interpret language liberally, some courts have
refused to apply technical language which would conflict with Code
policies."' Should a court apply common law which is more consistent
with a purpose or policy of the Code than express language? For ex-
ample, in the bulk sales problem" 2 the express language of section
6-104(3) that a transfer is not ineffective by reason of errors or omis-
sions in the list of the transferor's creditors unless the transferee had
(actual) knowledge of the errors or omissions, conflicts with the pri-
mary Code policy of Article 6—protecting creditors of the transferor
from fraud.'" The common law rule requiring "careful inquiry" by
"" Determining the "plain meaning" ()I' the Code is often difficult. On the dit.
ficulties of construction generally, see Frankfurter, Some Reflections on the Reading of Stat-
utes, 47 COLUM. L. REV. 527, 528-29 (1947). Although there are infinite gradations in
the clarity of statutes, at least some sections of the Code are clear enough for the courts
to apply without. resort to additional statutory construction techniques. Others, of
course, are not. The problem focused upon here is the proper role of § 1-103 when
there is adequate Code language.
"" The language of § 1.103 certainly means at least that. Failure to apply the
plain meaning would defeat at least two of the goals of codification—certainty and
n fo
' 8 ' See notes 43-46 & accompanying text supra.
182 See text at notes 47-55 supra.
1" See note 53 & accompanying text supra.
685
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
spective rights of seller arid buyer upon breach by the other. Little emphasis is placed
on the common law principle of restitution, and the common law avoidable conse-
quences rule is not neatly set out in any one section. It is not clear whether the com-
prehensiveness of the remedies system suggests that these concepts are excluded except
where specifically mentioned, or whether, instead, the absence of specific references to
these remedies principles suggest that they may be invoked to supplement the Code.
See notes 286-307 & accompanying text infra. Similarly it is not dear whether the def-
inition of "holder" in § 1-202(20) excludes the concept of constructive possession or
whether the section's silence on the issue suggests that common law constructive posses-
sion may in appropriate circumstances supplement the section. Compare Billingsley v.
Kelly, 261 Md. 116, 125, 274 A.2d 113, 118-19 (1971), recognizing constructive posses-
sion on the basis that it was "long-established" law, and because the statutory construc-
tion grounds were "vague and neutral" with Investment Serv. Co. v, Martin Bros. Con-
tainer & Timber Prod. Corp., 255 Ore. 192, 200-01, 465 P.2d 868, 871-72 (1970),
suggesting that constructive possession may have been eliminated from the Code.
"6 See Philadelphia Nat'l Bank v. Irving R. Boody Co., 1 UCC REP. SERV. 560,
568 (Funk Arb. 1963).
187 See, e.g., Frankfurter, supra note 179 at 544. It has been noted that for every
rule of construction its opposite can be found. Llewellyn, Remarks on the Theory of Appel-
686
UCC SECTION 1-1(13 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
late Decision and the Rules or Canons About How Statutes are to be Construed, S VANo. L. REV.
395, 401-06 (1950).
'88 Sec note 34 & accompanying text supra.
"9 See WHITE & SUNIMERS,Pfpra note 163, at 23-33.
"" Section 2-207(1) provides in kill:
Additional Terms in Acceptance or Confirmation—(1) A definite and seasonable
expression of acceptance or a written confirmation which is sent within a
reasonable time operates as an acceptance even though it states terms addi-
tional to or different from those offered or agreed upon, unless accep-
tance is expressly made conditional on assent to the additional or different
terms.
In determining whether the express language demonstrates that there is no gap
to fill, other statutory construction techniques such as an examination of legislative his-
tory could, of course, be employed.
00 de Sloo4re, Textual Interpretation of Statutes, II N.Y.U. L.Q. 538, 548-49
(1934).
687
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
purposes and policies which apply to the problem, the common law
rule should not supplement the Code. The conflicting purposes and
policies of the Code would demonstrate that the common law princi-
ple was purposefully displaced—that is, there is no gap.
In summary, where the plain meaning of the Code is difficult to
determine due to legislative silence, a court should first determine
whether the text itself indicates any position with respect to the com-
mon law rule. If it does, that direction ordinarily should be fol-
lowed.'" If the Code language does not appear to take any position
with respect to whether a common law rule supplements the Code, a
presumption should arise that the rule supplements the Code. That
presumption could be rebutted by demonstrating that clear Code pol-
icy on the point conflicts with the common law.'" 3
This priority system for filling gaps where the Code is silent is
not in harmony with a strict construction of either section 1-103 or
with the true code methodology of section 1-102. Under section
1-103, common law should be employed unless "displaced by the
particular provisions of' this Act." Comment 1 indicates that common
law must be "explicitly" displaced. Taken together, the section and
comment suggest that policy extrapolated by analogy, from Code
comments or from legislative history would not displace common law.
The approach suggested here, however, would require ignoring
common law which conflicts with such Code policy. Moreover, true
code methodology requires gap filling by resort to purposes and
policies with no reference to common law, while the suggested three
tier priority developed here permits common law to be invoked unless
there is a specific countervailing policy. The two sections are both part
of the Code and must be read together; the suggestions here may be
most consistent with the Code's main purpose of uniform develop-
ment, with least damage to the sections' individual mandates.
How should cases involving Code silence be decided under this
system? A reexamination of some of the cases discussed at the outset
of this article is sufficient here for illustrative purposes. For example,
in International Harvester Credit Corp.,'" the majority opinion did not
1 " 2 Occasionally, the common law proponent may succeed in demonstrating that
purposes and policies of the Code are consistent with the common law and inconsistent
with a technical reading or the Cock text. Query whether under these circumstances,
the common law should he employed. See text at notes 181-84 supra.
1 " To illustrate, at common law when buyer breached a contract for the sale of
goods, in some instances the available restitutionary remedy would put the seller in a
better position than if there had been no breach. See example cited in text at notes
298-300 irfra. Should this restitutionary rule be available under the Code remedies sys-
tem, which does nut specifically mention it? The Code's policy on remedies is to put the
injured party in as good a position as if there had been no breach not a better one. See
U.C.C. § 1-106. The Codes purposes and policies therefore conflict with this common
law rule and suggest that restitution should not be available under the Code, at least to
the extent that it puts the aggrieved party in a better position than if there had been no
breach. For a more complete analysis of this problem see part III commencing at note
236 of the text infra.
1 " 4 296 So.2d 32 (Fla. 1974). See notes 93-99 & accompanying text supra.
688
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
(5) In all cases not governed by other rules stated in this section (including
cases of purchase money security interests which do not qualify Ibr the special
priorities set forth in subsection (3) and (4) of this section), priority between
conflicting security in the same collateral shall be determined as follows:
(a) in the order of filing if both are perfected by filing, regardless of
which security interest attached first ... and whether it attached before or
after filing; 296 So,2d at 42 (emphasis supplied),
Section 9-312(5) nowhere mentions any qualification for security interests in
after-acquired property, which are expressly provided for in §§ 9-108 and 9-204. In-
ternational Harvester is noted in Note, 26 CASE W. Rrs. L. REV. 708 (1976). The author of
that Note argues that additional evidence that there is no exception in 9.321(5) as pre-
scribed by the majority is that other limitations are included in that section so that "the
absence of any limitation on the after-acquired property interest's priority is intentional."M.
at 722. However, the methodological approach suggested herein would discount such
statutory construction techniques, but would reach the same result as the Note on other
grounds. See notes 200-01 & accompanying text infra.
"" 296 So.2d at 41 (dissenting opinion). See U.C.C. 9-202: "Each provision of
this Article with regard to rights, obligations and remedies applies whether title to col-
689
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
party failed to object to the sale of collateral and credited the debtor's
account with the proceeds. 203 Under the suggested priority system, it
is submitted that the common law waiver principle should have been
applied. The express language of section 1-205 provides that "express
provisions of agreements control course of dealing and usage of
trade" but is silent as to whether common law waiver supplements the
section. 244 Code purposes and policies apparently do not conflict with
applying the waiver principle. Rather, they seem to support applying
it, since the Code generally has attempted to promote good faith and
fair dealing. 2 A result which permits the secured party to regain the
" 5
lateral is in the secured party or in the debtor." See also U.C.C. 1-201 (37); Note, 26
CASE W. RES. L. REV, 708, 725 (1976).
2 " 1 The dissent elaborates on these policies:
Since the success of the Code is based on its simplicity and its cer-
tainty, courts should make every effort to interpret its provisions simply,
literally, and absolutely. By creating judicial exceptions, changing def-
initions, and interpreting the Code extremely broadly, we will eventually
reproduce the morass of confused commercial law the Code was designed
to correct. In this particular case, I feel we are going out of our way to do
just that, because the Code provisions involved are not in the least am-
biguous.
296 So.2d at 45.
2 ° 2 186 Neb. 668, 186 N.W2d 99 (1971).
553 1d. at 670, 186 So.2d at 101. See notes 100-06 & accompanying text supra for
One important policy of the Code is the general requirement of integrity in con-
ducting transactions. See Skeels v. Universal CIT Credit Corp., 335 F.2d 846, 851 (3d
Cir. 1964).
690
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
Code purposes and policies probably reflect what the Code framers
intended as the proper use of section 1-103. 215 Regrettably, many
courts have found it difficult to determine whether a gap exists so
that common law may be invoked, and consequently often make deci-
sions on the gap issue on other grounds. Few cases have applied
common law only after expressly determining whether Code purposes
and policies conflict with the common law. 215 Accordingly, many deci-
sions invoke common law rules which conflict with Code purposes and
policies."' By relying on common law these decisions undermine the
Code's effectiveness as a unifier of commercial law and impede
achieving the Code's modernization objective.
NEW YORK LAW REVISION COMMISSION, REPORT OF THE LAW REVISION COMMISSION FOR
. 1955: I Srunv or TitE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL. Cons: 41, 69 (1955). The author foresaw a
mixed regime of Code and case law. Even some proponents of true code methodology
have sanctioned some use of common law:
[The device which permits a resort to be made to outside law is [not]
necessarily fatal to the construction of a true code. The use of outside law
militates against the code concept only when it relegates the code to a sup-
plemental position. So long as an act provides the general law, to be sup-
plemented by external rules, it can rise to the level of a code.
Hawkland, UnifOrm Commercial "Code" Methodology, 1962 U. ILL.. L. F. 291, 312.
2" In Stewart-Decatur Sec. Sys., Inc. v. Von Weise Gear Co., 517 F.2d 1136,
1139-40 (5th Cir. 1975), buyer, after inspecting a prototype gear motor it had requested
from seller, sent a purchase order to seller referring to the prototype, but which
specified a different input speed than the prototype. Id. at 1137. Buyer was unaware
that the input speed specified in the purchase order was different from the prototype
at the time the order was sent. Id. Seller returned an order acknowledgment which re-
ferred to the prototype by number, did not mention input speed, and approved the
sale. Id. Seller delivered gear motors with the input speed of the prototype which proved
unsatisfactory to buyer. Id. at 1138. The court held that a contract was created for
gear motors of the input speed of the prototype since buyer thought the prototype it
had seen was satisfactory and therefore intended to purchase it, even though buyer's
purchase order had specified a different input speed. Id. at 1139-40. In reaching its re-
sult, the court referred to the common law rule that the parties' construction of the
contract should be adopted. Id. The court also noted in a footnote that Code purposes
and policies reinforce the intention of the parties in contract formation. Id. at 1140
n.11. Thus the reference to common law was probably not in error, although it is re-
grettable that the Code policy discussion was buried in a footnote. Courts should em-
phasize the purposes and policies of the Code in conjunction with the common law dis-
cussion. Otherwise, in cases where common law and purposes and policies conflict, the
latter may be overlooked and common law applied.
" 7 See e.g., notes 31-40 & accompanying text supra. But see Seattle-First Nat'l
Bank v. Oregon Pac. Indus., Inc., 262 Ore. 578, 581, 500 P.2d 1033, 1034 (1972) (pur-
pose of Code "blunted" if rules of common law used in Code analysis.)
If the specific section at issue provides expressly that the court should look to
common law, a resort to Code principles and policies first may not be necessary. See
Ampex Corp. v. Appel Media, Inc., 374 F. Supp, 1114, 1118, (W.D. Pa. 1974) (section
3-601(2) states that a party . may be discharged by act or agreement which would dis-
charge a simple contract for. the payment of money). An official comment suggesting
that common law may be invoked may also be sufficient to bypass Code purposes and
policies as a source of law. See, e.g., McRae v. Vogler, — Ore. —, 536 P.2d 509, 511
& n.4 (1975) (comment to 9-207 states that § 9-207(2) "states rules which follow com-
mon law precedents").
692
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
21 ' Duval & Co. v. Malcom, '233 Ga. 784, 214 S.E.2d 356 (1975); Michigan Nail
Bank v. Flowers Mobile Home Sales, Inc., '26 N.C. App. 690, 217 S.E.2d 108 (1975).
See text at notes 114-28 supra.
2" 233 Ga. 784, 214 S.E.2d 356 (1975).
22" id. at 788-89, 214 S.E.2d at 359. See text at notes 114-20 for a discussion of
the case.
221 26 N.C. App. 690, 217 S.E,2d 108 (1975); see notes 121-28 & accompanying
Under [* 9-306(3)) if the security interest in the original collateral was per-
fected and the filed financing statement covering the original collateral
also covers proceeds, as is true in the present case, the security interest in
the proceeds is a "continuously perfected security interest." And under I*
9-205) "[a) security interest is not invalid or fraudulent against creditors by
reason of liberty in the debtor to use, commingle or dispose of all or part
of the collateral ... or to use, commingle or dispose of proceeds, or by rea-
son of the failure of the secured party to require the debtor to account
for proceeds or replace collateral." Although neither of these statutory
provisions speaks directly to the problem with which we are here con-
cerned, they' do indicate strongly the spirit in which the Uniform Com-
mercial Code is to be applied.
26 N.C. App. 690, 693, 217, S.E.2d 108, 110-11. The court then invoked common law
through * 1.103 to decide the case. Id. at 694, 217 S.E.2d at 1 l I.
2i
26 N.C, App. at 695, 217 S.E.2d at 1 1 l.
231 Id., 217 S.E.2d at 112.
232 Id.
694
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
"3 Although most of the case law is in accord with Michigan National Bank, see
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. First Nat'l Bank, 504 F.2d 998, 1002 (7th Cir.
1974) and cases cited therein, Professor Gilmore, the principle draftsman and reporter
For Article 9, suggested that proceeds cease to be identifiable when deposited in a batik
account with other funds and the security interest is lost. See 2 G. GILMORE, SECURITY
INTERESTS IN PERSONAL PROVERTY 27.9 at 735-36 (1965),
234 278 F.2d 820, 821-22 (3d Cir. 1960). See notes 135-45 and accompanying text
695
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
Under Article 2 of the Code both seller and buyer have certain
alternative remedies available to them upon breach. When "seller fails
to make delivery or repudiates or the buyer rightfully rejects or justi-
fiably revokes acceptance „ . ." 23 buyer may, among other choices, 237
"
amendments to the 1962 version which states had adopted and which had reduced its
uniformity. See' generally Coogan, The New UCC Article 9, 86 limo'. L. REV. 477, 479,
482-83 (1973).
236 U.C.G. 2-71 1.
237 Section 2-711(2) pros-ides that buyer may recover identified goods under
2-502 or obtain specific perfbrmance or replevy the goods in a proper case under §
2-716.
"" Section 2-712 provides in lull:
(1) After a breach within the preceding section the buyer may "cover" by
making in good faith and without unreasonable delay any reasonable pur-
chase of or contract to purchase goods in substitution for those due from
the seller.
(2) The buyer may recover from the seller as damages the difference be-
tween the cost or cover and the contract price together with any incidental
or consequential damages as hereinafter defined (Section 2-715), but less
expenses saved in consequence of the seller•s breach.
(3) Failure of the buyer to effect cover within this section does not bar him
from any other remedy.
See also J. WHITE & R. SUMMERS, UMFORM COMMERCIAL CODE § 6.3 (1972) [hereinafter
cited as WHITE & SUMMERS].
239 Section 2-713 provides in full:
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Article with respect to proof of marker
price (Section 2-723), the measure of damages for non-delivery or repudia-
tion by the seller is the difference between the market price at the time
when the buyer learned of the breach and the contract price together with
any incidental and consequential damages provided in this Article (Section
2-715), but less expenses saved in consequence of the seller's breach.
(2) Market price is to be determined as of the place for tender or, in cases
of rejection after arrival or revocation of acceptance, as of the place of
arrival,
696
UCC SECTION 1-163 AND 'CODE" METHODOLOGY
"" § 2-703.
241 Under § 2-703 seller may also withhold delivery, stop delivery by a bailee, in-
voke § 2-704 concerning seller's right to identify goods or to salvage goods, recover the
price in a proper case wider § 2-700, or cancel.
242 Section 2-706(1) provides in full:
(1) Under the conditions stated in Section 2-703 on seller's remedies, the
seller may resell the goods concerned or the undelivered balance thereof'.
Where the resale is made in good faith and in a ctonmercially reasonable
manner the seller may recover the difference between the resale price and
the contract price together with any incidental damages allowed under the
provisions of this Article (Section 2-710), but less expenses saved in conse-
quence of the buyer's breach.
See also WHETE SUMMERS, supra note 238, at § 7-6.
243 Section 2-708(1) provides in full:
(I) Subject to subsection (2) and to the provisions of this Article with re-
spect to proof of market price (Section 2-723), the measure of damages for
non-acceptance or repudiation by the buyer is the difference between the
market price at the time and place for tender and the unpaid contract
price together with any incidental damages provided in t h is Article (Sec-
tion 2-710), but less expenses saved in consequence of the buyer's breach.
244 See, e.g., WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 238, at 216.
242 See, e.g., id. at 190-91, 222-24.
248
"The Code directs the courts to accept virtually any evidence [of market
price], even that with marginal relevance." WHITE & SUMMERS, .supra note 238, at 190.
See, e.g., U.C.C. § 2-713 Comments 2 8e 3, and § 2-723. With a wide range of evidence
admissible, the market-price of the goods established at trial for the date buyer learned
of the breach often may be different from the actual price at which buyer purchased
substitute goods, either on the date buyer learned of the breach or later. Of course, the
price of buyer's substitute purchase in some situations will be the best evidence of mar-
ket price.
697
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
the contract price. Does buyer have the right under the Code to elect
damages based upon the section 2-713 market price-contract price
differential? Nothing in the Code clearly determines the answer to
this question.
Some commentators have argued that buyer should not be per-
mitted to elect damages based upon the section 2-713 market price-
contract price differential when buyer has favorably covered under
section 2-712.247 The proponents of' this position argue as follows:
First, section 2-711(1) expressly states that buyer may cover or elect
section 2-713 damages suggesting that buyer cannot do both. 248 Sec-
ond, section 2-713, Comment 5 states that: "The present section pro-
vides a remedy which is completely alternative to cover under the
preceding section and applies only when and to the extent that the
buyer has not covered." 24 " Third, Code policy suggests that there
should be no right of election. Section 1-106 provides that remedies
are to be "liberally administered" to put the injured party "in as good
a position as if the other party had fully performed ...." Under an
election approach, buyer is permitted to "play" the market—learning
of the breach when the market is high, covering when it drops and
then electing the section 2-713 market-contract differential—a right
which puts the aggrieved patty in a better position than if there had
been full performance, and which seemingly conflicts with the "good
faith" notions of the Code. 2 "
On the other hand, advocates of an election approach argue
that "nothing supporting [Comment 51 can be found in the text of
section 2-713." 251 In addition, they note that there is no similar limi-
tation with respect to seller's remedies either in the Code comments
or expressly in the text. 252 These scholars also resort to the Code's
purposes and policies and argue that to preserve a "parity of remedy
for buyers and sellers," 253 to be consistent with the Code's distaste for
election of remedies concepts, to ease administrative difficulties such
as proof problems, 254 and to encourage market substitutes, all of
"4 1d. Peters suggests that "[lit would be most difficult to ferret out from a re-
luctant complainant information about transactions sufficiently related to the contract in
breach to qualify as cover or resale." Id.
698
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
2. Sellers' Election
3. Case Law
Very little case law has, as of yet, dealt with the election prob-
lem. As might he suspected, cases which have touched the election
issue under the Code are not uniform in their solution to the prob-
lem. Some seem to indicate that the right of election is unaffected by
whether the injured party has covered or resold. 260 In Dehahn v.
Innes, 281 for example, a seller, upon breach by buyer, resold the farm
equipment buyer had contracted to buy.'" The court held that seller
was entitled to the difference between the contract price and the fair
market value of the goods at the time of the breach, " 3 stating:
We hold that section 2-703 which enumerates the seller's
remedies, where the buyer [breaches] are cumulative be-
tween the right to ...
"Resell and recover damages as hereafter provided
(section 2-706); and ...
Recover damages for nonacceptance (section 2-708)
"264
• • •
thors believe that the New York Law Revision Commission work is of "greater value"
than prior drafts of the Code. Id.
2e" Neal-Cooper Grain Co. v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 508 F.2d '283, 294 (7th
Cir. 1974) ("failure to cover does not bar any remedy except consequential damages").
2" 356 A.2d 7 l 1 (Me. 1976).
2" Id. at 721-22. The court noted that the Maine Code Comment supported this
interpretation. Id. at 722, citing ME REV. STAT. ANN. tit. t 1 § 2-706, Maine Code Com-
ment to subsection (3). In Dehahn, it should be noted, the seller was not attempting to
take advantage of an unusually good resale price, but rather was attempting to avoid dif-
ficulty with the fact that he had failed to notify the breaching buyer of his resale. 356
A.2d at 721. If he were held to have elected his resale remedy, then his failure to notify
the breaching party would prevent him from receiving any damages at all from the
breaching party. Id. To avoid this outcome, the court allowed the defendant to elect to
recover the difference between the contract price and the fair market value, and used
the resale price as evidence of the market price of the goods sold. Id. at 720-22.
2 " 335 F. Stipp. 970 (E.D. Pa. 1971).
"6 Id. at 970.
700
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
only the difference between the cost of his cover and the contract
price."'"
4. Resolution
Should courts laced with an ambiguous express Code position
on the election problem attempt to sift through what are arguably
contradictory Code purposes and policies in reaching a conclusion on
the issue; or should a resort to section 1-103 common law be permit-
ted to supplement the Code in this situation? Since Code language is
ambiguous and policies are at loggerheads—i.e., there is no clear cut
and uncontested Code policy to apply—a resort to common law
should be permitted. An additional method of approaching the prob-
lem is to argue that the court is faced with a Code silence problem,
not an ambiguity problem—there are no affirmative statements in the
Code with respect to the election issue when the seller and buyer
have already resold or covered. Furthermore, the Code does not ex-
pressly mention the avoidable consequences principle—of possible
help in solving the dilemma—in relation to the problem. 27" Thus, the
presumption that common law applies to supplement the Code arises
and since Code purposes and policies themselves conflict, the pre-
sumption is not. rebutted.
Unlike the Code, which has no clear solution to the election of
remedies problem, the common law offers some definite guidelines.
The common law avoidable consequences rule, also known as the
"duty to mitigate damages" provides that damages which are avoida-
ble by reasonable actions of the injured party are not recoverable in
an action for the breach. 27 ' One principal component of the rule re-
"" Id., citing Delmont Gas Coal Co. v. Diamond Alkali Co„ 275 Pa. 535, 119 A.
710 (1923). 1E1 reaching its conclusion the'court did not cite the Code at all, although in
an earlier hearing on the merits the same judge reached the same conclusion citing §
2-712(2). 319 F, Supp. 1043, 1047 (E.D. Pa. 1970). 1n both opinions the court noted
that one reason fo r its limitation of recovery to the actual cover was that the contract
did not clearly require a total delivery of 3,500 bags but rather required delivery every
10 days of the number of bags buyer requested, 350 bags being an estimation of buyers'
needs. 335 F. Supp. at 971, 319 F. Supp. at 1047-48. Thus, the best indication of
buyer's actual damages, according to the court, was the amount by which buyer cov-
ered. 335 F. Stipp. at 971, 319 F. Supp. at 1048.
27" The avoidable consequences principle is included in the Code. See, e.g., U.C.C.
§ 1-106, Comment I (the Code "makes it dear that damages must be minimized"). See
also §§ 2-712(2) and 2-715(2)(a) providing that damages are reduced by the amount of
expenses saved by buyer as a result of breach and permitting buyer to recover conse-
quential damages "which could not reasonably be prevented by cover nr otherwise and
§ 2-709(1)(b) permitting seller to recover the price but. only if seller makes an effort to
resell and cannot. Nevertheless, the Code nowhere expressly indicates whether the right
of election of contract-market differential is available alter cover or resale. It is not. clear
whether this means that the avoidable consequences principle was excluded with respect
to this issue. The bankruptcy' of employing statutory construction rules suggests that a
presumption should arise that the principle supplements the Code.
271
Warren v. Stoddart, 105 U.S. 224, 229 (1881); 5A ComitN, Conis oN CON-
TRACTS § 1039 (1964),
701
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
quires the injured party to minimize damages suffered from the loss
of a bargain by entering into substitute transactions where
reasonable. 272 Whether the injured party's common law duty to enter
into substitute transactions applied to sales cases to limit the injured
party's general damages when an opportunity was ignored,'" is far
from clear. 274 What is generally clear however, is that if the aggrieved
party actually did enter into a substitute transaction and thereby less-
ened his loss—e.g., an aggrieved buyer purchased substitute goods at
$5100 when contract price was $5000 and market value $5200—the
injured party could recover only for the actual loss caused by the
breach. 275
How then, should the "duty" to mitigate principle be employed
to solve the Code election dilemma? The court should first note that
Code language is unclear or silent on the issue and that Code pur-
poses and policies are contradictory. The court should then indicate
that under section 1-103 common law may therefore •be employed.
Since at common law the aggrieved buyer's or seller's damages would
be limited by an effective cover or resale, so too should those dam-
ages be limited under the Code. 276
A breaching party would have a much more difficult time con-
vincing a court that if a favorable cover or resale was available and ig-
nored before the injured party had changed its position, the injured
party is limited to damages based upon the measures afforded by the
The use of the word "duty" is incorrect. Failure to mitigate does not give rise to a
cause of action, it merely restricts damages of the injured party to those which could
riot have been avoided. Id.; See Hillman, supra note 250, at 554 n.l. C. McCoRmicE.
HANDBOOK ON THE LAW OF DAMAGES 33 at 128 (1935).
272 See C. Mcatsticx, supra note 271, § 33, at 127.
THE LAW OF CONTRACTs § 1387 at 422 (3d ed. 1968); Lawrence v. Porter, 63 F. 62, 66
(6th Cir. 1894); Coos Lumber Co. v. Builders Lumber & Supply Co., 104 N.H. 404,
408, 188 A.2d 330, 332-33 (1963). But see McCoRmicK, supra note 271, at 668; Banks v.
Pann, 82 Cal. App. 20, 24, 254 P. 937, 938 (1927); Seward v. Pennsylvania Salt Mfg.
Co., 266 Pa. 457, 461, 109 A. 617, 618 (1920).
275 See Farnsworth, Legal Remedies for Breach q. Contract, 70 CoLum. L. REV. 1145,
1190 (1970). See also Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Stover Mfg. & Engine Co., 37
F.2d 876, 877 (7th Cir, 1929); May Hosiery Mills v. Munford Cotton Mills, 205 Ala. 27,
29, 87 So. 674, 676 (1920); Delmont Gas Coal Co. v. Diamond Alkali Co., 275 Pa. 535,
539, 119 A. 710, 711 (1923); Donald W. Lyle, Inc. v. Heidner & Co., 45 Wash.2d 806,
817, 278 P.2d 650, 656-57 (1954).
" 6 It is at least arguable that Code purposes and policies do not really conflict on
the election issue but suggest that no election is permitted. See notes 281-85 & accom-
panying text infra. If the policies are clear that no election should be permitted, of
course, common law would not be invoked at all.
702
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
2 " Seller may wish to save the deal, good will, and reputation and thus offer to
sell at less than market price, but still be financially unable to perform at contract price.
For further discussion of "when" an injured party should be "required" to accept new
offers from breaching parties, see Hillman, supra note 250.
2" Assume the same hypothetical, except seller's perfect tender on July I is re-
fused by buyer and the market value of the widgets is $80. A few days later, before
seller has changed position, buyer offers to purchase for $00. Can seller ignore the new
offer and recover the contract price-market price differential?
4
"' See, e.g., U.C.C. § 2-712(3): "Failure or the buyer to effect cover within this
section does not bar him from any other remedy."
28 " See note 259 & accompanying text .supra.
251
U.C.C. § 1-106(0.
" 2 By supporting expectations the remedial system encourages parties to enter
into contracts which benefit the economy by inducing specialization and efficiency. See
Hillman, supra note 250, at 556-57. The expectancy system, however, eliminates eco-
nomic waste by awarding only those damages that are unavoidable. Injured parties are
therefore encouraged to enter into substitute transactions. Id, at 558-59.
703
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
sale formula when cover or resale is available and would result in less
damages than the market-contract differential. The injured party is
simply not injured by the breach to an extent any greater than these
measures afford. Is the buyer in the hypothetical, who has not
changed position and still needs the goods and is offered cover at
$105 when contract price is $100 and market price $125, injured. to
the extent of $5 or $25? It would seem the buyer's injury is only $5.
Any further injury is not caused by the breach but by buyer's refusal
to accept the new offer.
It may also be contended that other Code policies really do not
conflict with limiting damages to the available cover or resale. The
election of remedies argument may prove too much. An injured
party should not be permitted to elect remedies, and indeed, the
Code could not have intended to permit an election, when the end re-
sult would be to put the injured party in a better position than before
the breach and to penalize the breaching party. In addition, "election"
opponents have noted that the policy of encouraging market substi-
tutes would obviously be furthered by limiting damages to cover or
resale measures when they are available: "The draftsmen unquestion-
ably intended that 2-713 take a backseat to 2-712 and certainly did
not intend to offer an incentive (in the form of a higher damage
award) which would influence buyers not to use 2-712." 283
Although Code policies arguably support an approach which
limits damages to the available cover or resale measures, the express
language of the Code in section 2-712(3) supporting the availability of
section 2-713 market-contract damages when the injured buyer has
passed up a substitute offer should probably prevail, at least with re-
spect to buyer's remedies. If a breaching seller was able to persuade a
court that the express text should not be literally applied, and that the
Code policy arguments against an election for buyer should prevail,
(or a breaching buyer prevailed on the Code policy arguments that an
election for the seller should not be permitted), then under the prior-
ity system presented in this Article—Code policy over common law—a
court would not have to consider common law mitigation of damages
principles via section 1-103 which conflicted with this Code policy. 284
Since it is the obligation of the injured party to avoid loss, a court
could hold that resale or cover may be the only reasonable way of
243 WHITE & SUMMERS, supra note 238, at 182. The probable intent of § 2-713 is
to award about the same recovery in non-cover cases as § 2-712 would have done. Id. at
182-83.
224 Similarly, a court would not have to resort to common law principles if a
breaching buyer prevailed on Code policy arguments that an election for the seller
should not he permitted.
At common law there is conflicting authority on whether an injured party could
pass up a favorable substitute deal in sales cases. See note 274 supra & accompanying
text. Nevertheless, the policy arguments in favor of limiting damages to the available
cover or resale under the Code all applied at common law. See Hillman, supra note 250,
at 575-76.
704
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
edies and resulted in almost a total absence d any development of restitution re-
coveries." Nordstrom, Resthulion on Debull and Article Two q' lhe Unififfm Commercial
Code, 19 VAND. L. ittly. 1143, 1150 (1966).
The expectation interest is "whatever Idle injured party] would have gained had
the promise been performed." MURRAY, supra note 273, at.•438. The restitution interest
compels the breaching party to return the enrichment conferred by the injured party so
that the injured party is restored to the position he enjoyed prior to the agreement. Id.
There are some restitution:try remedies available in Article 2. For example, §§
2-507 and 2 - 511 permit specific restitution of goods sold km cash if buyer fails to pay
or buyer's check is dishonored. Buyer may get a refund under §2-711 when seller fails
to deliver. Even if' buyer repudiates under § 2-718 buyer is entitled to partial restitution
of prepayments.
In shaping Code remedies, Professor Nordstrom argues that. the reliance, res-
titutionary, and expectancy interest should be "balanced." Nordstrom, supra at 1148.
Nordstrom suggests that there may have been no conscious policy to omit restitutionary
interests: "Perhaps ... restitution defies statutory codification, and a case by case de-
velopment which considers the impact of each case is the only path which holds promise
of an adequate development of restitutionary ideas." Id. at 1181.
2" Nordstrom, supra note 286, at 1181.
705 .
BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
cepted (up to the contract price)—here $10 per widget or $800. 288
Seller would, of course, be liable to buyer for damages seller caused
buyer.
The Code also permits the defaulting seller to recover for goods
accepted, but does not include the fair value measure—buyer must
pay for goods accepted at the contract rate. 2" Thus, seller is still
permitted a portion of the profit even though in default. One com-
mentator points out that acceptance can occur under the Code "even
though buyer did not intend to keep the goods," 2 " and argues that
the Code should have included a "fair value" measure. The commen-
tator then implies that courts should look to section 1-103 to "repair"
the situation:
It is regretted ... that the emphasis placed upon the expec-
tation interest overshadowed a measure of recovery similar
to the "fair value" treatment given the defaulting seller
under the Uniform Sales Act. Perhaps Courts will he wise
enough ... to consider Code cases with an emphasis upon
the seller's restitution interest, rather than to allow the sell-
er to recover a part of his profit even though he is in sub-
stantial default."'
This solution, however, would not be in accord with the pro-
posed methodological approach proposed in this article. The Code
has expressly provided that the measure of recovery to seller for
goods accepted is the contract rate and does not expressly apply the
restitution principle to a claim by a defaulting seller. What is the sig-
nificance of the Code's silence on restitution? Under the priority sys-
tem suggested in this Article for filling gaps such as the Code's si-
lence on restitution, common law restitution limiting seller's recovery
when in default to "fair value" would not be available because Code
purposes and policies conflict with such a limitation on the seller's re-
covery.
There are many opportunities under the Code for the buyer to
706
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
return the goods to the seller.'" Buyer will be "stuck" with them and
the concomitant duty to pay the contract price only if buyer has ac-
cepted them 293 and has failed to make an effective revocation of
acceptance. 2 " When rejection and revocation of acceptance are
unavailable to buyer a judgment has been made by the drafters of
the Code that the buyer ought to be liable for the full price.'" For
example, if buyer waits an unreasonable length of time to attempt to
reject perishable goods because of' a substantial and easily identifiable
quantity defect, during which time the goods spoil, the Code provides
that rejection and revocation of acceptance are unavailable and buyer
must pay the contract price for the goods received. 2 " Applying
common law restitution to limit breaching seller's recovery to less
than contract price would conflict with this policy. Additionally, the
Code remedial policy of fostering commercial activity by supporting
expectations without punishing 2" 7 suggests that a defaulting seller
vocation are unavoidable includes only a few situations in which buyer has accepted
without knowledge of the breach. Reading 55 2-606 and 2-608 together, it appears that
buyer will be required to pay contract price for goods he does not want to keep: (1)
when buyer had had reasonable opportunity to inspect and incorrectly signifies that the
goods are conforming (5 2-606(1)(a) ); (2) when buyer does an act inconsistent with sell-
er's ownership or waits too long to reject because of buyer's negligence in not discover-
ing the defect a 2-606( l)(b) & (c) ); (3) when buyer does an act inconsistent with seller's
ownership or waits too long to reject because of the difficulty of discovery or seller's as-
surances, but buyer does not revoke acceptance within a reasonable time (55 2-606(1)(b)
& (c), 2-608(1)(b), 2-608(2)). Buyer also will be required to pay the contract price for
defective goods when he accepts on the reasonable assumption of cure and the goods
are not cured, but again only 'if buyer has waited too long to revoke acceptance (5
2-608(1)(a) ).
In all of the above situations it seems fair to require buyer to pay contract price
since it is lack of due care which results in the obligation to keep and pay for the goods.
For a more elaborate discussion of the requirements for effective rejection and revoca-
tion of acceptance see J. WHITE & R. SUMMERS, UNIFORM COMMERCIAL Coma, 8-3
(1972).
zva
U.C.C. §§ 2-606(I)(b), 2-602(1), 2-608(2).
292 See note 282 & accompanying text supra.
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BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
who delivers goods which are accepted by buyer even without knowl-
edge that seller would subsequently default should be paid the con-
tract price, unless, of course; the goods are not as valuable to buyer
as a result of the breach. The Code's emphasis on expectations and
de-emphasis of restitution is itself a policy which should not be cir-
cumvented by section 1-103. Since Code policies conflict with apply-
ing restitution, it should not be applied.
able is not helpful. The relatively comprehensive treatment of the remedial provisions
of Article 2 suggest that remedies omitted front its scope are excluded from coverage.
Comment 1 to § 2-703 seems to indicate that § 2-703 is all-inclusive. "This section is an
index section which gathers together in one convenient place all of the various remedies
open to a seller for any breach by the buyer." U.C.C. § 2-703, Comment 1 (emphasis
added). But the absence from this list of remedies which are available elsewhere
suggests that the comment must be discounted. See, e.g.. U.C.C. § 2-718.
708
UCC SECTION 1-103 AND "CODE" METHODOLOGY
014 Palmer, The Contract Price as a Limit on Restitutions for Difenorant's Breach, 20
()irk) Sr. L. J. 264 (1959); D. Dom's, H AxoBooK oN 1..m• oF REMEDIEs 794-95 (1973).
a"5 If there had been no breach seller would have received $1200 for the 1200
widgets. Under a restitution:try route, seller would receive $1200 but would also be
permitted to keep the 600 widgets.
U.C.C. §1-102(2)(b). The Code contains many provisions designed to encourage
contract-making and performance even after breakdown. See Hillman, supra note 250,
at 579 & n. 127. See also note 282 .supra.
307 See Hanzler, The Business and Economic Function.s of the Law of Contract Damages,
6 Am. Bus. L. J. 387, 392 (1968). Professor Hartzler suggests that penalizing non-
performance may result in " a limitation on the undertaking which the promisor is will-
ing to accept." Id.
Gilmore, Article 9: What It Does fir the Past, 26 1,A. REV. 285, 286 (196(1).
'"" See e.g., note 34 supra.
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BOSTON COLLEGE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL LAW REVIEW
310 A significant contributing factor to the "de-codification" of the Code is its own
710
BOSTON COLLEGE
INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL
LAW REVIEW
VOLUME XVIII APRIL 1977 NUMBER 4
BOARD OF EDITORS
FACULTY ADVISOR
PAUL R. MCDANIEL