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. ====== Executory Contracts: The Ultimate Guide for Business Owners and Individuals ====== **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 an Executory Contract? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you've signed a one-year lease for a new storefront and paid the first month's rent. You have a legal right to use the space, but you also have an ongoing duty to pay rent for the next eleven months. Likewise, your landlord has a right to receive your rent, but they also have an ongoing duty to maintain the property, keep the lights on in the hallway, and ensure you have access. Both of you still have significant promises to keep. This isn't a completed transaction; it's a living, breathing agreement where both sides have important jobs left to do. This is the essence of an executory contract. It's a legal agreement where both parties still have material, unperformed obligations. If either of you stopped doing your part, it would be a major problem—a `[[material_breach]]`. This concept becomes critically important, almost like a superpower, during a `[[bankruptcy]]` case, where it gives the person or company filing for bankruptcy (the "debtor") the extraordinary choice to either keep these valuable contracts alive or walk away from the burdensome ones. Understanding this term is essential for anyone in business, whether you're a landlord, a software developer, or a franchisee. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **The Core Principle:** An **executory contract** is any ongoing agreement where both parties have significant, unfulfilled duties, and a failure by either party to perform would constitute a material breach. [[contract_law]]. * **Its Main Impact:** The primary power of the **executory contract** concept arises in bankruptcy, where it allows a debtor to either "assume" (keep) or "reject" (breach) the contract under the protection of the [[bankruptcy_court]]. [[bankruptcy_code_section_365]]. * **Your Critical Action:** If you have an **executory contract** with a person or business that files for bankruptcy, you must be proactive in understanding your rights and monitoring the case to protect your interests. [[creditor's_rights]]. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Executory Contracts ===== ==== The Story of Executory Contracts: A Historical Journey ==== The idea of an "executory" or unfinished contract is as old as commerce itself. It stems from the fundamental principles of English and American `[[common_law]]`, which have always distinguished between a promise and a completed act. A simple purchase at a store is an "executed" contract—you hand over money, they hand over goods, the deal is done. But business relationships—leases, supply agreements, construction projects—are built on promises of future performance. For centuries, these ongoing agreements were governed solely by state-level `[[contract_law]]`. If one party failed to perform, the other's remedy was typically to sue for breach of contract. However, the game changed dramatically with the rise of modern bankruptcy law. The framers of the U.S. `[[bankruptcy_code]]` recognized a fundamental problem: a struggling company on the brink of collapse is often tangled in a web of contracts. Some of these contracts, like a below-market lease on a prime location, are incredibly valuable assets. Others, like an agreement to buy overpriced materials, are crippling liabilities. To give a debtor a genuine chance to reorganize and have a "fresh start," Congress needed to provide a tool to sort through this mess. This led to the codification of the concept within federal law, most notably in **Section 365 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code**. This powerful statute grants the `[[bankruptcy_trustee]]` or the `[[debtor-in-possession]]` the authority to analyze all executory contracts and unexpired leases and make a strategic business decision: assume the good ones and reject the bad ones. This federal power, designed to facilitate economic rehabilitation, represents the most significant evolution of the executory contract concept in American legal history. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== While the idea of an executory contract is rooted in state contract law, its modern power is almost entirely defined by federal statute. **The Key Federal Law: `[[bankruptcy_code_section_365]]`** This is the central nervous system for executory contracts in the United States. While the Bankruptcy Code itself doesn't provide a neat, one-sentence definition, Section 365 lays out the rules of the road. Its core provision states: > "...the trustee, subject to the court’s approval, may assume or reject any executory contract or unexpired lease of the debtor." **In plain English:** This gives the person managing the bankruptcy estate (the trustee or the debtor-in-possession) the ultimate authority to pick and choose which ongoing agreements to keep and which to discard. * **Assumption:** If the debtor "assumes" the contract, they agree to be bound by its terms moving forward. The contract is pulled into the bankruptcy estate and treated as a high-priority administrative expense. To do this, the debtor must: * **Cure all defaults:** Pay any past-due amounts or fix any other breaches. * **Provide adequate assurance of future performance:** Prove to the court and the other party that they have the financial ability to continue honoring the contract's terms after the bankruptcy. * **Rejection:** If the debtor "rejects" the contract, it is treated as a `[[breach_of_contract]]` that occurred immediately before the date the bankruptcy was filed. The other party (the non-debtor counterparty) cannot force the debtor to perform. Instead, their sole remedy is to file a `[[proof_of_claim_(form_410)]]` for damages, and they will be treated as a general unsecured creditor, often receiving only pennies on the dollar. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== While `[[bankruptcy_code_section_365]]` is a federal law, the question of whether a contract is "executory" in the first place depends on state law. This is because state law defines what constitutes a "contract" and what qualifies as a "material breach." The most widely accepted definition is the **Countryman Test**, named after a 1973 law review article by Professor Vern Countryman. It states that an executory contract is one where "the obligations of both the bankrupt and the other party to the contract are so far unperformed that the failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing the performance of the other." Here’s how the underlying state law can create different outcomes: ^ Jurisdiction ^ Key State Law Principle Affecting Executory Contracts ^ What This Means For You ^ | **Federal (Bankruptcy Code)** | Provides the **power** to assume or reject. Defers to state law for the definition of "material breach." | This is the overarching framework. Your contract's fate will be decided in federal bankruptcy court, but the judge will look to your state's laws to interpret the contract itself. | | **California (CA)** | Employs a "substantial performance" doctrine. A breach is only material if it defeats the core purpose of the contract, preventing the other party from getting the main benefit they bargained for. | In California, it might be harder to argue a contract is executory if minor obligations are all that remain. The unperformed duties must be truly essential to the deal. | | **New York (NY)** | Follows a strict interpretation of contract terms. New York law often allows parties to explicitly define in the contract what constitutes a material breach, and courts tend to respect these clauses. | If you are doing business in New York, your contract's wording is paramount. A well-drafted contract can give you more certainty about whether it will be considered executory in a bankruptcy. | | **Texas (TX)** | Focuses on a multi-factor test for materiality, considering the extent of injury, the possibility of compensation, and the good faith of the breaching party. It's a more holistic, less rigid analysis. | In Texas, the outcome can be less predictable and more dependent on the specific facts presented to the judge. The context of the breach matters just as much as the contract's text. | | **Delaware (DE)** | As the hub of U.S. corporate law, Delaware courts are highly sophisticated in analyzing complex business agreements. They often look at the economic reality of the transaction to determine materiality. | For complex corporate agreements like M&A deals or IP licenses governed by Delaware law, courts will dig deep into the business rationale, making a purely technical argument less likely to succeed. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== To truly understand an executory contract, you need to dissect its anatomy. The concept rests on a few critical pillars. ==== The Anatomy of an Executory Contract: Key Components Explained ==== === Element: Mutual, Unperformed Obligations === This is the heart of the definition. It's not enough for one party to have remaining duties; **both** must have something significant left to do. * **Example 1 (Executory): A Software License Agreement.** A software company grants a business a one-year license to use its accounting software. * **Software Company's Duty:** To provide ongoing access to the software, deliver updates, and offer technical support. * **Business's Duty:** To pay the monthly or annual license fee and abide by the usage terms. * **Conclusion:** Since both have ongoing, material obligations, this is a classic executory contract. If the software company shut down the servers, the business would be excused from paying. If the business stopped paying, its access would be revoked. * **Example 2 (Not Executory): A Promissory Note.** A bank lends a small business $50,000. * **Bank's Duty:** The bank has already fully performed by giving the business the money. It has no significant duties left. * **Business's Duty:** To make monthly payments until the loan is paid off. * **Conclusion:** Since only one party (the business) has remaining obligations, this is **not** an executory contract. It's a simple debt that cannot be "rejected" in bankruptcy (though the debt itself can be discharged). === Element: Materiality of the Obligations === The unperformed duties can't be trivial. They must be so important that if one party failed to perform them, it would be considered a `[[material_breach]]`, giving the other party the right to walk away from the deal. * **Example: A Construction Contract.** A homeowner hires a contractor to build a deck. The contract requires the contractor to build the deck and the homeowner to pay $10,000 in stages. The contractor has finished 99% of the work; all that's left is to apply a final coat of sealant. * **Is it executory?** Probably not. The contractor has "substantially performed" their duties. The failure to apply the sealant is a minor breach, but it likely doesn't excuse the homeowner from paying the entire $10,000 (though they could deduct the cost of hiring someone else to apply the sealant). Because the remaining obligation is not material, a court would likely find the contract is not executory. === Element: The Debtor's Critical Choice: Assume or Reject === This is where the theory becomes a powerful, real-world tool in bankruptcy. The debtor gets to look at each executory contract and decide if it's a golden opportunity or a lead weight. * **The "Assume" Decision (Keeping the Contract):** A debtor will assume a contract if it is profitable or essential to their reorganization. * **Scenario:** A coffee shop files for `[[chapter_11_bankruptcy]]`. It has a lease on its prime downtown location with three years remaining at a below-market rent. This lease is a huge asset. The shop will file a motion to **assume** the lease, curing any back rent owed and providing the landlord with proof that its new business plan can support future payments. * **The "Reject" Decision (Breaching the Contract):** A debtor will reject a contract that is losing money or is no longer needed. * **Scenario:** That same coffee shop also has a contract with a high-end supplier for expensive, imported coffee beans. As part of its reorganization, the shop is shifting to a more affordable, locally sourced model. The supply contract is now a liability. The shop will **reject** the contract. The supplier can't force the shop to buy any more beans; their only option is to file a claim for damages, which will likely be paid out at a fraction of its value. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in an Executory Contract Dispute ==== * **The Debtor:** The person or company that has filed for bankruptcy. In a `[[chapter_11_bankruptcy]]`, they are often called the `[[debtor-in-possession]]` (DIP) and continue to run the business. * **The Non-Debtor Counterparty:** You. This is the other person or business on the contract. Your goal is either to ensure you get paid what you're owed and that the contract will be honored, or to be freed from the contract so you can move on. * **The `[[bankruptcy_trustee]]`:** In many `[[chapter_7_bankruptcy]]` cases and some Chapter 11 cases, a trustee is appointed by the court to manage the debtor's assets. The trustee makes the decision to assume or reject. * **The `[[bankruptcy_court]]`:** The federal judge who oversees the entire process. The judge must approve any motion to assume or reject a contract, ensuring the decision complies with the Bankruptcy Code. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== What do you do if you get a letter in the mail saying your client, tenant, or key supplier has just filed for bankruptcy? Panic is a natural reaction, but knowledge is your best defense. ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Face an Executory Contract Issue ==== === Step 1: Acknowledge the Notice and Halt All Actions === - You will receive an official `[[notice_of_bankruptcy_filing]]`. The moment the bankruptcy is filed, an `[[automatic_stay]]` goes into effect. This is a court injunction that immediately stops all collection activities. - **Do Not:** * Send invoices or demand letters. * Call the debtor to ask for payment. * Attempt to repossess property or terminate the contract. - **Doing so violates federal law and can result in severe penalties.** === Step 2: Immediately Consult with a Bankruptcy Attorney === - The bankruptcy system is complex and has its own unique rules and deadlines. Navigating it alone is extremely risky. An attorney can help you understand your rights and file the necessary paperwork to protect your interests. === Step 3: Analyze Your Contract and Performance === - Work with your attorney to determine if your agreement qualifies as an executory contract under the Countryman Test and your state's law. - Document the performance of both parties to date. Is the debtor behind on payments? Are you? This information will be critical when the debtor decides whether to assume or reject. === Step 4: Monitor the Bankruptcy Case for a Motion to Assume or Reject === - The debtor has a set period to decide what to do with your contract. In a Chapter 7, this is typically 60 days (for residential leases and personal property). In a Chapter 11, the debtor has until the reorganization plan is confirmed, which can take many months. - You (or your attorney) must keep an eye on the court docket for a `[[motion_to_assume_or_reject_executory_contract]]`. === Step 5: Respond Strategically to the Debtor's Decision === - **If the Debtor Moves to Assume:** * Review the motion carefully. Does it include a plan to "cure" all defaults (pay you everything you are owed)? * Does it provide "adequate assurance of future performance"? If you believe the debtor's financial projections are unrealistic and they will likely default again, you can file an objection with the court. - **If the Debtor Moves to Reject:** * The rejection constitutes a breach. You are now free from your obligations under the contract. * You must calculate all the damages you have suffered because of the breach (e.g., lost profits, costs to find a new supplier/tenant). === Step 6: File a Timely Proof of Claim === - This is one of the most critical steps. The court will set a "bar date," which is the deadline for all creditors to file their claims. - If your contract is rejected, you must file a `[[proof_of_claim_(form_410)]]` for your rejection damages. - If your contract was in default *before* the bankruptcy was filed, you must file a proof of claim for those pre-bankruptcy arrears, even if the contract is ultimately assumed. - **If you miss the bar date, you will likely recover nothing.** ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **`[[notice_of_bankruptcy_filing]]`:** The official court document that initiates the case and informs you of the automatic stay and key deadlines. * **`[[motion_to_assume_or_reject_executory_contract]]`:** The formal request filed by the debtor with the court, asking for permission to either keep or break your contract. You have a right to receive a copy of this and to file a response. * **`[[proof_of_claim_(form_410)]]`:** The single most important form for a creditor. This is how you officially tell the court what you are owed. It must be filled out accurately and filed before the court's deadline. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== The seemingly simple concept of an executory contract has been shaped by decades of court battles. These landmark cases define its boundaries and impact businesses today. ==== Case Study: NLRB v. Bildisco & Bildisco (1984) ==== * **The Backstory:** Bildisco, a building supplies company, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. It had a `[[collective_bargaining_agreement]]` (CBA) with a labor union, but after filing, it stopped making health and pension contributions required by the agreement. * **The Legal Question:** Can a company in bankruptcy unilaterally reject a CBA, or does it need to prove that the agreement is so burdensome it will doom the reorganization? * **The Court's Holding:** The U.S. Supreme Court held that a CBA is an executory contract that can be rejected. However, it set a higher standard for rejection than for a typical commercial contract, requiring the debtor to show that the CBA "burdens the estate" and that the "equities balance in favor of rejection." * **Impact on You Today:** This case established the immense power of the bankruptcy system to alter even heavily regulated labor agreements. While Congress later amended the Bankruptcy Code to add more procedural protections for unions, *Bildisco* remains a landmark case demonstrating the broad authority granted to debtors to shed burdensome contracts. ==== Case Study: In re Sunterra Corporation (2004) ==== * **The Backstory:** A company called RCI licensed software to Sunterra. The license agreement stated that it was "non-transferable." Sunterra later went through a complex Chapter 11 reorganization that involved merging into a new corporate entity. RCI argued that this merger was a prohibited transfer, and Sunterra could not "assume" the license for the newly formed company. * **The Legal Question:** Can a debtor assume an executory contract if a hypothetical transfer of that contract would be prohibited by law (the "Hypothetical Test")? Or can they assume it as long as they aren't *actually* transferring it to a third party (the "Actual Test")? * **The Court's Holding:** The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals adopted the "Hypothetical Test," ruling that if the law would forbid the transfer of the contract to a third party, the debtor cannot even assume it for themselves. This was a very harsh result for debtors with valuable but non-assignable `[[intellectual_property]]` licenses. * **Impact on You Today:** This created a major split among circuit courts. If you are licensing intellectual property (like software or a patent), whether your licensee can keep that license in bankruptcy could depend on where they file their case. It highlights the importance of understanding jurisdiction in these matters. ==== Case Study: Mission Product Holdings, Inc. v. Tempnology, LLC (2019) ==== * **The Backstory:** Tempnology licensed its trademark and logo for a line of cooling apparel to Mission Product. Tempnology then filed for bankruptcy and rejected the trademark license agreement. Tempnology argued that this rejection terminated Mission Product's right to continue using the trademark. * **The Legal Question:** Does the "rejection" of an executory contract act like a full-blown rescission that vaporizes all rights under the contract? Or is it simply a breach, leaving the non-debtor party with whatever rights a breach would normally give them? * **The Court's Holding:** In a major victory for licensees, the Supreme Court ruled that rejection is merely a breach, **not** a rescission. This means that if the non-breaching party would have the right to continue using the licensed IP outside of bankruptcy, they retain that right even after the licensor rejects the contract in bankruptcy. * **Impact on You Today:** This is a game-changer. If you are a franchisee or an IP licensee, this ruling provides significant protection. It means a bankrupt licensor cannot use rejection to simply take back the rights you bargained for; they can only stop their own future performance and breach the deal, leaving your existing rights intact. ===== Part 5: The Future of Executory Contracts ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== The business world is evolving faster than the law, creating new challenges for the traditional definition of an executory contract. * **Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) Agreements:** Is a subscription to a cloud-based service like Salesforce or Microsoft Office 365 an executory contract? Most courts say yes, treating it like a software license. But what if the service is almost entirely automated, with minimal ongoing duties from the provider? The lines are blurring. * **"Gig Economy" Contracts:** Are agreements between companies like Uber or DoorDash and their drivers executory contracts? A driver has an ongoing duty to provide rides according to the platform's standards, and the company has an ongoing duty to process payments and maintain the app. A bankruptcy filing by one of these major platforms could trigger a massive legal battle over the nature of these agreements and the rights of millions of drivers. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **`[[Smart_Contracts]]` and Blockchain:** A smart contract is a self-executing contract with the terms of the agreement directly written into lines of code on a `[[blockchain]]`. They are designed to be immutable and automatically enforced. How does this fit with bankruptcy law? Can a debtor "reject" a smart contract that is coded to be unstoppable? Can a bankruptcy court order a "cure" for a default on a decentralized ledger? These questions have no clear answers yet and represent a fascinating new frontier for contract law. * **Data as an Asset:** Modern agreements increasingly involve the right to use and access data. If a data-hosting company goes bankrupt and rejects its service agreement with you, what happens to your data? The *Mission Product* ruling suggests you might retain your right to access it, but the practical and technical challenges are immense. Future legal battles will focus on defining the nature of data rights within the executory contract framework. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * `[[adequate_assurance]]`: A promise, backed by evidence, that a party can meet its future obligations under a contract. * `[[assume]]`: The decision by a debtor in bankruptcy to keep an executory contract and continue to be bound by its terms. * `[[automatic_stay]]`: An injunction that automatically stops lawsuits, foreclosures, and all collection activity against the debtor the moment a bankruptcy petition is filed. * `[[bankruptcy_code]]`: The body of federal law that governs all bankruptcy cases in the United States. * `[[bankruptcy_trustee]]`: A court-appointed official who oversees the administration of a bankruptcy estate. * `[[bar_date]]`: The final deadline set by the bankruptcy court for creditors to file their proofs of claim. * `[[breach_of_contract]]`: A violation of any of the agreed-upon terms and conditions of a binding contract. * `[[chapter_11_bankruptcy]]`: A form of bankruptcy that involves a reorganization of a debtor's business affairs, debts, and assets. * `[[contract_law]]`: The body of law that relates to making and enforcing agreements. * `[[creditor]]`: A person or institution to whom money is owed. * `[[cure]]`: The act of remedying a default under a contract, typically by paying any past-due amounts. * `[[debtor]]`: The person or entity that has filed for bankruptcy. * `[[executed_contract]]`: A contract where all parties have fully performed their obligations. * `[[material_breach]]`: A failure of performance under the contract which is significant enough to defeat the contract's core purpose. * `[[reject]]`: The decision by a debtor in bankruptcy to breach an executory contract and be relieved from its future obligations. ===== See Also ===== * `[[bankruptcy_code_section_365]]` * `[[automatic_stay]]` * `[[contract_law]]` * `[[breach_of_contract]]` * `[[chapter_11_bankruptcy]]` * `[[intellectual_property]]` * `[[creditor's_rights]]`