Indemnity in A Contract
Indemnity in A Contract
Indemnity in A Contract
3.Key Fundamentals
1. It is a promise to compensate for or security against damage, loss or
injury.
4.Enforcement
1. A contract of indemnity can be enforced according to its terms.
2. Claim of Indemnity holder can include: damages, legal costs of
adjudication, amount paid under the terms of compromise
3. The measure of damages is the extent to which the promisee has been
indemnified.
4. Indemnifier should ideally be informed of the legal proceedings or should
be joined as third party
5. There is no onus to show breach or actual loss.
(6) Punitive Damages - this is money given to punish a person who acted
in an offensive and egregious manner in an effort to deter the person and
others from repeated occurrences of the wrongdoing. You generally cannot
collect punitive damages in contract cases.
(7) Rescission - the contract is canceled and both sides are excused from
further performance and any money advanced is returned.
(8) Reformation - the terms of the contract are changed to reflect what
the parties actually intended.
(2) all costs which he may be compelled to pay in any such suit if, in
bringing or defending it, he did not contravene the orders of the promisor,
and acted as it would have been prudent for him to act in the absence of
any contract of indemnity, or if the promisor authorised him to bring or
defend the suit;
(3) all sums which he may have paid under the terms of any compromise of
any such suit, if the compromise was not contrary to the orders of the
promisor, and was one which it would have been prudent for the promisee
to make in the absence of any contract of indemnity, or if the promisor
authorized him to compromise the suit.
The State of NSW (The State) filed a cross-claim against TSL, alleging that
it was obliged to indemnify it under the terms of a service contract.
Service providers can take some comfort from the case of Coleiro which
supports the view that a temporal connection between the performance of
the service and the loss sustained is insufficient to invoke an indemnity
clause.
In Tanksley v. Gulf Oil Corp[4].this court held that an oil company cannot
invoke an indemnification agreement with a contractor after settling an
injured worker's claims because, by settling, the oil company foreclosed its
opportunity to have a court determine that it was free from fault[5].
From the above case decisions it can be inferred that indemnity can be
invoked on demand
Indemnity may be invoked where the claimant has a pre-existing condition
that caused a loss of use of a member of the body and there is proof that
the loss of use is sufficiently pronounced that an ordinary person could
discover it[6]
7. Conclusion
Indemnity is a legal exemption from the penalties or liabilities incurred by
any course of action. An insurance payout is often called an in indemnity, or
it can be insurance to avoid any expenses in case of a lawsuit.
Indemnification is a promise, usually asnn contract provision, protecting one
party from financial loss. This is something stated as a requirement that one
party hold harmless the other.(Hold harmless does not imply
indemnification.
The first says I wont make any claims against you and the second says I will
pay the claims against and/or your costs, etc.) Indemnification is a type of
insurance which protects the one party from the expenses of other.
Indemnification clause cannot usually be enforced for intentional tortious
conduct of the protected party.