Notable Applications and Case Law
Pre-20th Century Examples
In English common law, the case of Paradine v. Jane (1647) exemplified early judicial reluctance to excuse contractual performance due to unforeseen events. The defendant, a lessee, argued that enemy forces occupying the leased property during the English Civil War constituted an overriding event preventing use and payment of rent; however, the court ruled that the obligation to pay rent persisted, absent any express contractual provision or statutory exception, reinforcing the principle of pacta sunt servanda.[105]
This strict approach began to evolve in the 19th century. In Taylor v. Caldwell (1863), the Queen's Bench Division addressed a contract for the hire of a music hall that was destroyed by fire before the event, rendering performance impossible. The court discharged both parties from further obligations, recognizing an implied term that excused non-performance due to the destruction of the contract's subject matter by an act beyond human control, akin to vis major or act of God; this decision laid foundational principles for later force majeure interpretations in common law jurisdictions, distinguishing it from mere hardship.[105][106]
In civil law systems, the Napoleonic Code of 1804 explicitly codified force majeure in Article 1148, excusing obligations where performance became impossible due to an external event not attributable to the debtor, such as wars or natural catastrophes. This provision influenced applications across Europe and colonies; for instance, during the 1870–1871 Franco-Prussian War, French courts invoked it to suspend or terminate contracts disrupted by military requisitions and blockades, prioritizing causal impossibility over absolute obligation.[107][11]
Shipping contracts provide additional pre-20th-century illustrations of vis major defenses. In 18th- and 19th-century admiralty cases, English courts excused carriers for losses from unforeseeable storms or perils of the sea, as in Forward v. Pittard (1785), where a warehouse fire—deemed an act of God—absolved the bailee from liability absent negligence, influencing force majeure clauses in maritime agreements.[108]
20th and 21st Century Disputes
In the 20th century, the 1973 oil embargo imposed by OPEC members triggered widespread invocations of force majeure clauses in energy supply contracts across the United States and internationally, as refiners and distributors faced acute shortages of crude oil and petroleum products. Suppliers such as Atlantic Richfield curtailed deliveries to customers, citing force majeure provisions that encompassed government regulations and supply disruptions beyond their control, leading to disputes resolved variably by courts and arbitrators depending on contractual language and evidence of direct causation.[109] In one instance, Gulf Oil invoked force majeure to justify breaching a supply agreement, arguing that the embargo-driven surge in foreign crude prices rendered performance economically unviable, though outcomes often hinged on whether clauses explicitly covered price volatility or regulatory mandates rather than mere hardship.[110]
These mid-century disputes underscored a judicial reluctance to extend force majeure to foreseeable market fluctuations, even amid global crises, prioritizing strict interpretation of enumerated events like embargoes over general economic distress.[111]
Entering the 21st century, the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks prompted force majeure claims in commercial leases and service contracts affected by the destruction of the World Trade Center, with lessees and tenants seeking excusal from obligations due to evacuations, airspace closures, and heightened security measures. In 1 World Trade Center LLC v. Cantor Fitzgerald Securities (2004), a New York court upheld a force majeure clause in a lease agreement, shielding the landlord from liability for nonperformance caused by third-party acts including terrorism, as the clause explicitly covered such disruptions and the attacks directly prevented tenant occupancy and operations.[112] This ruling affirmed that deliberate violent acts could qualify under broad clauses, provided they rendered performance objectively impossible rather than merely inconvenient.[113]
Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 similarly generated disputes in Louisiana and surrounding jurisdictions, where contractors, suppliers, and real estate parties invoked force majeure for delays or nonperformance amid flooding, evacuations, and infrastructure collapse. Louisiana courts, applying civil law principles, recognized the hurricane as a quintessential force majeure event but required plaintiffs to demonstrate that it irresistibly prevented fulfillment of obligations, denying relief in cases where alternatives like remote closing existed, as in disputes involving delayed property sales.[114] For supply contracts, some tribunals excused delivery failures if clauses listed "acts of God" and evidence showed total supply chain severance, though mere increased costs or logistical difficulties failed to satisfy the impossibility threshold.[19]
The 2008 global financial crisis elicited numerous claims of force majeure in financing, leasing, and commercial agreements strained by liquidity shortages and market collapses, yet U.S. courts predominantly rejected economic downturns as qualifying events absent explicit contractual inclusion of recessions or financial hardship. In Elavon, Inc. v. Wachovia Bank, National Association, a Georgia federal court ruled that the 2008 crisis did not trigger a force majeure clause in a payment processing contract, emphasizing that generalized economic conditions, even severe, do not equate to the unforeseen externalities typically covered, such as natural disasters or wars.[115] Similarly, New York decisions in lease disputes held that plummeting revenues from the crisis constituted commercial risk allocable under standard clauses, not excusable nonperformance, reinforcing a narrow construction to prevent clauses from becoming hardship escapes.[116] These rulings highlighted systemic judicial caution against broadening force majeure to macroeconomic shocks, preserving contractual predictability amid volatility.[117]
Post-2020 Developments
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted a surge in force majeure claims globally, as parties sought relief from obligations disrupted by lockdowns, border closures, and supply chain breakdowns starting in March 2020. In the United States, COVID-19 has been recognized as a force majeure event in many court cases when clauses explicitly include epidemics, pandemics, diseases, government restrictions, or broad catchall provisions, such as in JN Contemporary Art LLC v. Phillips Auctioneers LLC (S.D.N.Y. 2020), where it excused an auction house's performance, and Nelkin v. Wedding Barn at Lakota's Farm, LLC (N.Y. Civ. Ct. 2021), where government orders triggered refunds; outcomes vary by clause language and causation proof. Courts consistently interpreted clauses narrowly, requiring the event to be explicitly listed or directly causative of non-performance, with many claims failing if pandemics were not specified.[118] Similarly, in the UK, the High Court in Classic Maritime Ltd v Limbungan Makmur (2022) upheld a force majeure invocation for a vessel charter disrupted by a Brazilian dam collapse amid pandemic-related delays, emphasizing foreseeability and mitigation efforts, though COVID itself was not the sole trigger.[119] A survey of U.S. rulings through 2023 revealed that while some regulatory actions qualified, broad "acts of God" interpretations rarely succeeded without contractual support, leading to over 100 reported disputes with low invocation success rates under pre-pandemic drafts.[65]
The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine introduced new force majeure disputes, particularly in energy, agriculture, and metals sectors, where sanctions, export restrictions, and logistical blockades halted deliveries; companies like grain traders invoked clauses citing war as an enumerated event, but tribunals often scrutinized availability of alternative sourcing, denying relief if partial performance remained feasible.[120] In a 2023 U.S. case involving Honeywell and Flexjet, Honeywell claimed force majeure under a private jet parts contract, attributing delays to combined COVID-19 effects and Ukraine war-induced supply shortages, but a federal court granted summary judgment against the defense, ruling the clause required specific causation proof unmet by generalized disruptions.[121] European arbitrations under ICC rules similarly rejected claims for natural gas supplies if contracts lacked explicit geopolitical triggers, highlighting how pre-2020 clauses inadequately anticipated hybrid risks like sanctions compounding pandemic aftershocks.[122]
By 2024-2025, ongoing supply chain strains from these events, alongside inflation and tariffs, spurred refinements in judicial application, with U.S. courts like the Fifth Circuit in Mieco LLC v. Pioneer Natural Resources (July 2024) enforcing force majeure in natural gas deals only where market volatility directly prevented delivery, rejecting broader economic hardship arguments.[122] Academic analyses of post-2020 case law underscore a trend toward stricter evidentiary burdens, including documentation of mitigation attempts, as tribunals dismissed claims lacking proof that events were unforeseeable despite early pandemic warnings.[123] These developments have informed revised contract standards, with bodies like the ICC recommending explicit inclusion of pandemics, cyber threats, and geopolitical conflicts to mitigate future ambiguities.[124]