Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Commercially Reasonable: The Ultimate Guide to Your Business Obligations ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is "Commercially Reasonable"? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you own a small coffee shop. You sign a contract with a new bean supplier who promises to use **"commercially reasonable efforts"** to deliver your weekly order. One week, a major hurricane hits their region, disrupting all shipping routes. Your delivery is a day late, and the supplier had to use a more expensive trucking company to get it to you at all. Are they in breach of contract? Probably not. They acted as any other sensible, prudent supplier would under the circumstances. Now, imagine the same scenario, but the delay was caused because their regular driver called in sick, and they didn't bother to find a replacement for six hours. They didn't try other shipping companies or even call you to explain the delay. Was that commercially reasonable? Almost certainly not. They failed to act with the ordinary prudence and diligence expected in the business world. This simple difference is the essence of the "commercially reasonable" standard. It’s the law’s way of asking, "Did you act like a sensible, fair businessperson in this situation?" It’s a flexible, powerful concept that governs countless transactions, from selling repossessed property to fulfilling complex service agreements. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **A Standard of Prudence:** The **commercially reasonable** standard requires a person or business to act in a way that a typical, prudent businessperson would under the same market conditions and circumstances. [[good_faith_and_fair_dealing]]. * **Your Contracts Are Covered:** Being **commercially reasonable** is a fundamental obligation in most business contracts, especially those governed by the [[uniform_commercial_code]], and failing to meet this standard can lead to a [[breach_of_contract]] lawsuit. * **Context is Everything:** There is no magic checklist; whether an action is **commercially reasonable** is a fact-intensive question that depends entirely on the specific industry, market, and details of the situation. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of "Commercially Reasonable" ===== ==== The Story of "Commercially Reasonable": A Historical Journey ==== The idea of "reasonableness" is one of the oldest pillars of Anglo-American law. It grew from the English [[common_law]] concept of the "reasonable man"—a hypothetical, ordinary citizen whose sensible behavior could be used as a benchmark in legal disputes, particularly in cases of `[[negligence]]`. This standard was designed to be objective, preventing a court from having to read a defendant's mind and instead allowing it to judge actions against a consistent, community-based ideal. As commerce and trade exploded in the 19th and 20th centuries, this general concept of "reasonableness" was adapted for the fast-paced, complex world of business. Courts recognized that a "reasonable person" on the street might not know the proper way to conduct a foreclosure sale or manage a complex supply chain. The standard needed to be more specific, evolving into the "commercially reasonable" person—a figure who possesses the ordinary skill, knowledge, and foresight of someone in a particular trade or industry. The most significant turning point in the history of this concept was the creation and widespread adoption of the **Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)**. Drafted in the mid-20th century to harmonize the laws of sales and other commercial transactions across the United States, the UCC explicitly embedded the "commercially reasonable" standard into the DNA of modern business law. It made this standard a mandatory requirement in critical areas, ensuring that business dealings were conducted with a baseline of fairness, diligence, and good faith. ==== The Law on the Books: The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) ==== The [[uniform_commercial_code]] is the single most important statute defining the concept of "commercially reasonable." While it’s a model code, it has been adopted in some form by all 50 states. Two articles are particularly important: * **UCC Article 9: Secured Transactions.** This is where the term is most famously and frequently litigated. When a borrower defaults on a secured loan (like a car loan or business equipment loan), the lender (`[[creditor]]`) has the right to repossess the collateral. However, [[ucc_article_9]] imposes a strict duty on the creditor: > **UCC § 9-610(b):** "Every aspect of a disposition of collateral, including the method, manner, time, place, and other terms, must be commercially reasonable." * **Plain English Translation:** If a bank repossesses your business's delivery truck, they can't just sell it for a lowball price to the first person they see. They must make a genuine effort to get a fair market price. This includes things like cleaning the truck, advertising the sale in appropriate places (not just a tiny classified ad), selling it at a reasonable time, and choosing a proper venue (e.g., an auto auction vs. a private sale to a friend). If they fail to do this, a court can reduce or even eliminate the amount of money the borrower still owes after the sale. * **UCC Article 2: Sales.** This article governs contracts for the sale of goods. While it doesn't use the phrase "commercially reasonable" as a single, overarching command like Article 9 does, the principle is woven throughout. For example: > **UCC § 2-706(1):** After a buyer wrongfully rejects goods, the seller may resell them and recover damages, but "...the resale must be made in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner." * **Plain English Translation:** If a customer orders 1,000 custom t-shirts and then backs out of the deal, the t-shirt company can sell the shirts to someone else to recoup their losses (`[[mitigation_of_damages]]`). However, they must do so reasonably. They can't let the shirts sit in a warehouse for a year until they are out of style and then sell them for pennies, nor can they sell them for a suspiciously low price to a relative. They must try to get the best price possible under the current market conditions. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== While the UCC provides a uniform framework, its interpretation can vary by state, as courts apply the standard to local industries and legal precedents. Here’s a comparison of how the "commercially reasonable" standard might be viewed in different jurisdictions. ^ **Jurisdiction** ^ **Key Focus & Interpretation** ^ **What This Means For You** ^ | **Federal Level (Bankruptcy)** | Focus on maximizing value for all creditors. A `[[bankruptcy]]` trustee's actions are judged on whether they benefit the entire estate, not just one party. Procedures are highly scrutinized. | If you're a creditor in a bankruptcy, a trustee's sale of assets must be conducted in a way that is fair to everyone involved, often requiring court approval and public notice. | | **New York** | As a global financial hub, NY courts are highly sophisticated in analyzing complex commercial transactions. They often look closely at established industry practices and expert testimony on what is standard in finance, M&A, and international trade. | In New York, simply following a standard procedure may not be enough. Courts will expect you to act in line with the high standards of your specific, often complex, industry. Documentation is paramount. | | **California** | CA courts often deal with tech, entertainment, and real estate. They may place a stronger emphasis on procedural fairness and providing adequate notice, especially when there's an imbalance of power between the parties (e.g., a large bank vs. a small business owner). | If doing business in California, ensure your processes for handling defaults or contract disputes are transparent and give the other party ample opportunity to respond. Good communication is key. | | **Texas** | With a strong focus on oil, gas, and agriculture, TX courts are familiar with volatile commodity markets. They may give more weight to the market conditions at the time of the action. A low price for collateral might be deemed reasonable if the entire market had crashed. | In Texas, be prepared to prove that your actions were sensible *given the specific market dynamics at that moment*. Market analysis and timing can be crucial evidence. | | **Florida** | Florida has a high volume of `[[foreclosure]]` and debt collection cases. Its courts have developed extensive case law on what constitutes a commercially reasonable sale of repossessed property, often focusing on the adequacy of advertising and the location of the sale. | When dealing with secured property in Florida, pay meticulous attention to the "how" and "where" of your sale. Proper advertising and choosing an appropriate auction or sales method are critical. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== The "commercially reasonable" standard is not a rigid rule but a bundle of principles. A court will look at the "totality of the circumstances" to decide if the standard was met. Here are the core components they analyze. ==== The Anatomy of "Commercially Reasonable" ==== === Element: The Objective Standard (The "Prudent Businessperson") === This is the most critical element to understand. The law doesn't care what **you** personally thought was reasonable. It asks: "What would a reasonably prudent businessperson, in this same line of business, have done under these exact circumstances?" This objective test prevents someone from defending their actions by saying, "Well, it seemed like a good idea to me!" * **Hypothetical Example:** A lender repossesses a highly specialized piece of medical equipment. The lender’s agent, who normally only handles cars, sells it for 10% of its value at a general-purpose auction. The agent might genuinely believe they did their job. But a court would find the sale was **not** commercially reasonable. A prudent businessperson in the medical equipment financing industry would know that such equipment must be sold through a specialized broker or advertised in industry-specific journals to reach qualified buyers and get a fair price. === Element: The Role of Context and Industry Practice === What is reasonable in one industry can be completely unreasonable in another. The entire context of the transaction is paramount. * **Industry:** Selling fresh produce requires immediate action, while selling commercial real estate involves a much longer, more deliberate marketing process. * **Market Conditions:** Trying to sell repossessed ski equipment in July will be judged differently than selling it in December. A sale during a deep economic recession will be viewed more leniently on price than a sale in a booming market. * **Nature of the Goods/Service:** Selling a generic, used car has a well-established process (e.g., cleaning it, listing it online, taking it to an auction). Selling a one-of-a-kind piece of art requires expert appraisals and a completely different sales strategy. === Element: Procedural Fairness vs. Price Obtained === This is a common point of confusion. A low price, by itself, does **not** automatically mean a sale was commercially unreasonable. However, it will invite heavy scrutiny from a court. The key focus is on the **process**. If a party can show they followed all the right steps—proper advertising, contacting potential buyers, choosing the right type of sale, getting appraisals—then a court may uphold the sale even if the final price was disappointing. Conversely, if a party gets a fantastic price through a flawed and unfair process (e.g., a secret, single-bidder sale to a relative), a court could still find the action was commercially unreasonable because the process itself was improper. Most courts believe that a fair process is the best guarantee of a fair price. === Element: Good Faith and Fair Dealing === The "commercially reasonable" standard is a close cousin to the [[implied_covenant_of_good_faith_and_fair_dealing]], which exists in nearly every U.S. contract. This covenant means that parties to a contract cannot deliberately act in a way that undermines the spirit of the agreement or denies the other party the benefit of their bargain. Acting in a commercially unreasonable manner is often seen as a direct violation of this duty of good faith. ==== Putting It to the Test: Who Decides and How? ==== When a dispute arises over whether an action was commercially reasonable, several key players become involved: * **Business Managers:** They are on the front lines, making daily decisions that must meet this standard. Their goal is to achieve their business objectives while acting prudently and fairly to avoid litigation. * **Attorneys:** When a major decision looms (like foreclosing on a large asset), lawyers advise businesses on the steps required to comply with the commercially reasonable standard. In a dispute, they are the ones who gather evidence and argue whether the standard was met. * **Judges and Juries:** Ultimately, if the parties cannot agree, a judge or jury will be the final arbiter. They will listen to testimony, review documents (like advertisements, emails, and appraisals), and consider expert opinions to determine if, based on the totality of the circumstances, the actions in question measured up to the objective standard of a prudent businessperson. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== As a business owner, you don't want to end up in court arguing about reasonableness. The best strategy is to build processes that ensure your actions are defensible from the start. ==== Step-by-Step: How to Ensure Your Actions are Commercially Reasonable ==== === Step 1: Document Every Single Decision === If it isn't written down, it didn't happen. This is the golden rule. When handling a sensitive transaction (like selling collateral or changing a service agreement), keep a detailed log. * **What to Document:** Phone calls made, emails sent, offers received, advertisements placed, advice sought, market research conducted. * **Why it Matters:** This documentation is your primary evidence to demonstrate the careful and diligent process you followed. It shows a judge you weren't acting rashly or in bad faith. === Step 2: Understand and Follow Industry Standards === Know how your peers and competitors handle similar situations. * **How to Learn:** Read trade publications, attend industry conferences, and talk to other professionals. If you are a secured lender, know the standard procedures for asset disposition in your field. If you are a software provider, know the standard response times for critical bug fixes. * **Why it Matters:** Following established industry practices is one of the strongest defenses against a claim that your actions were unreasonable. === Step 3: Seek Multiple Bids, Appraisals, or Opinions === When value is a question, don't rely on a single data point. * **Practical Examples:** * **Selling Collateral:** Get at least three bids from potential buyers. Obtain a formal appraisal from a certified professional before the sale. * **Changing Suppliers:** If your current supplier defaults, document your efforts to get quotes from several alternative suppliers before choosing one. * **Why it Matters:** This demonstrates a deliberate effort to achieve a fair market outcome and protects you from accusations of self-dealing or negligence. === Step 4: Communicate Clearly, Professionally, and in Writing === Keep the other party informed. Surprises lead to lawsuits. * **What to Communicate:** If you are a lender, you must provide proper, formal notice of a foreclosure sale as required by the UCC and your loan agreement. If you are a service provider facing a delay, proactively inform your client, explain the reasons, and outline your plan to fix it. * **Why it Matters:** Clear communication can de-escalate conflicts and shows that you are acting in `[[good_faith]]`. A lack of notice is a huge red flag for courts. === Step 5: When in Doubt, Consult a Lawyer === For high-stakes situations, don't guess. The cost of a few hours of legal advice is minuscule compared to the cost of a lawsuit. A lawyer can provide a checklist of required steps and help you create the documentation you need to protect your business. ==== Contract Clauses: Defining "Commercially Reasonable" in Your Agreements ==== One way to reduce uncertainty is to add clarity to your contracts. * **The "Efforts" Clause:** Contracts often use phrases like "best efforts," "reasonable efforts," or "commercially reasonable efforts." While courts interpret them similarly, there are nuances. "Best efforts" is sometimes seen as a higher, more demanding standard. To avoid ambiguity, you can define what these terms mean. * **Example Clause:** "For the purposes of this Agreement, 'Commergially Reasonable Efforts' shall mean those efforts that a prudent and determined company of a similar size and in the same industry would take in a similar situation to achieve the desired result. It does not require the party to take actions that would be commercially ruinous or fundamentally alter its business." * **Defining Specific Actions:** Your contract can list specific actions that will be automatically considered "commercially reasonable." * **Example Clause:** "The parties agree that any sale of the Collateral shall be deemed commercially reasonable if it is advertised for at least ten (10) days in [Name of Trade Publication] and conducted by a licensed auctioneer." * **Notice and Cure Provisions:** These clauses require one party to give the other formal notice of a `[[breach_of_contract]]` and a reasonable amount of time to "cure" or fix the problem. This builds the concept of reasonableness directly into your dispute resolution process. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== Case law provides the real-world texture for understanding this concept. ==== Case Study: In re Zsa Zsa Gabor (1995) ==== * **The Backstory:** The famous actress Zsa Zsa Gabor filed for `[[bankruptcy]]`. One of her primary assets was her lavish Bel-Air mansion. The bankruptcy trustee needed to sell the house in a commercially reasonable manner to pay her creditors. * **The Legal Question:** The trustee proposed a highly detailed and elaborate sales process, involving international marketing, a public relations firm, and a multi-stage bidding process. Was this complex and expensive process commercially reasonable? * **The Court's Holding:** The court approved the trustee's plan, holding that for a unique, high-value asset like a world-famous celebrity mansion, a standard real estate listing would *not* be commercially reasonable. The court affirmed that the method of sale must be tailored to the specific nature of the asset to maximize its value. * **Impact on You Today:** This case illustrates that "commercially reasonable" is not a one-size-fits-all concept. Your sales efforts must match the value and uniqueness of the asset. You can't sell a factory using the same process you'd use to sell a forklift. ==== Case Study: General Electric Credit Corp. v. Bo-Mar Construction Co. (1977) ==== * **The Backstory:** Bo-Mar, a construction company, defaulted on a loan for a piece of heavy machinery (a backhoe). The lender, GE Credit, repossessed the backhoe and, without making any repairs or even cleaning it, sold it at a public auction for a very low price. GE then sued Bo-Mar for the large deficiency balance. * **The Legal Question:** Was the sale conducted in a commercially reasonable manner when the lender made no effort to prepare the collateral to make it attractive to buyers? * **The Court's Holding:** The California court ruled that the sale was **not** commercially reasonable. The court noted that a prudent seller would have at least made minor repairs and cleaned the equipment to attract higher bids. Because the process was flawed, the court refused to grant GE the deficiency judgment it was seeking. * **Impact on You Today:** This case establishes that a creditor can't just dump repossessed property on the market "as-is" if minimal effort could significantly increase the sale price. It creates a positive duty to prepare collateral for sale properly. ==== Case Study: Bloor v. Falstaff Brewing Corp. (1979) ==== * **The Backstory:** Falstaff Brewing bought the Ballantine beer brand. The contract required Falstaff to use its "best efforts" to promote and sell Ballantine beer, with a royalty payment due to the original owners for every barrel sold. Falstaff was a larger company with its own brands. Over time, it slashed the advertising budget for Ballantine and prioritized its own products, causing Ballantine's sales to plummet. * **The Legal Question:** Did Falstaff's decision to cut marketing and prioritize its own brands violate its contractual duty to use "best efforts" (a standard closely related to and often interpreted as requiring commercially reasonable actions)? * **The Court's Holding:** The influential Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that Falstaff had breached its duty. The court ruled that "best efforts" does not require a company to go bankrupt for another brand, but it does require it to treat the brand with the same energy and resources it would if it were its own. Falstaff could not sacrifice the Ballantine brand just to prop up its own flagging sales. * **Impact on You Today:** This is a landmark case for any business in a licensing, distribution, or partnership agreement. It means that when you promise to use "best" or "commercially reasonable" efforts to promote a partner's product, you have to actually try. You can't put the product on the back burner and ignore it. ===== Part 5: The Future of "Commercially Reasonable" ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Pandemics, Supply Chains, and Force Majeure ==== The COVID-19 pandemic stress-tested the "commercially reasonable" standard like never before. It raised new and difficult questions: * **Force Majeure:** Many contracts include `[[force_majeure]]` clauses, which excuse performance due to "acts of God" or other unforeseeable events. But what were a business's "commercially reasonable" duties once a `[[force_majeure]]` event was declared? Did they have a duty to find alternative, albeit more expensive, ways to perform? Courts are now grappling with these issues. * **Supply Chain Disruptions:** When a supplier can only produce 80% of its normal output, how should it "reasonably" allocate that product among its customers? Should it be pro-rata? Should it prioritize its largest customers? This is a fierce area of current and future litigation. * **Commercial Leases:** Was it commercially reasonable for landlords to demand full rent from restaurants and retailers that were forced to close by government mandate? This question has been central to thousands of landlord-tenant disputes nationwide. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The "commercially reasonable" standard is a living concept that will continue to evolve. * **Big Data and AI:** In the past, a lender selling a repossessed car might have checked a few pricing guides to set a floor price. In the future, will it be considered commercially unreasonable *not* to use sophisticated data analytics that can predict the optimal auction location, time, and starting price to maximize value? As technology becomes more accessible, the standard of what is "prudent" will inevitably rise. * **Cybersecurity:** What constitutes a "commercially reasonable" cybersecurity program for a small business? As data breaches become more common, courts will increasingly be asked to define a baseline of reasonable security measures (like multi-factor authentication, employee training, and data encryption) that all businesses handling sensitive data must meet. * **Sustainability and ESG:** As Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) criteria become more important to investors and consumers, could the definition of "commercially reasonable" expand? For example, in the future, might a court consider whether a company's choice of supplier was commercially reasonable not just based on price, but also on the supplier's environmental record or labor practices? This remains a forward-looking debate, but it shows how the standard adapts to broader social expectations. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[breach_of_contract]]:** A failure, without legal excuse, to perform any promise that forms all or part of a contract. * **[[collateral]]:** Property or other assets that a borrower offers a lender to secure a loan. * **[[common_law]]:** The body of law derived from judicial decisions of courts rather than from statutes. * **[[creditor]]:** A person or company to whom money is owed. * **[[foreclosure]]:** The legal process by which a lender attempts to recover the balance of a loan from a borrower who has stopped making payments by forcing the sale of the asset used as the collateral for the loan. * **[[good_faith]]:** Honesty in a person's conduct during an agreement. * **[[good_faith_and_fair_dealing]]:** An implied covenant in most contracts that assumes the parties will deal with each other honestly and fairly, so as not to destroy the right of the other party to receive the benefits of the contract. * **[[mitigation_of_damages]]:** A person who has suffered an injury or loss must take reasonable action to avoid additional injury or loss. * **[[negligence]]:** A failure to exercise the care that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in like circumstances. * **[[secured_transaction]]:** A transaction in which a borrower grants a lender a security interest in specific property (collateral) to secure a loan. * **[[ucc_article_2]]:** The section of the UCC that governs contracts for the sale of goods. * **[[ucc_article_9]]:** The section of the UCC that governs secured transactions. * **[[uniform_commercial_code]]:** A comprehensive set of laws governing all commercial transactions in the United States. ===== See Also ===== * [[breach_of_contract]] * [[uniform_commercial_code]] * [[good_faith_and_fair_dealing]] * [[force_majeure]] * [[mitigation_of_damages]] * [[negligence]] * [[contract_law]]