Contract Breaching
For example, I have a client who has the job was sued for breach of contract. He worked for a historical museum that has an awareness education programs. While he was there, it came with its own programs, which are similar to the museum. The only difference is that they offered a lower cost per new materials better - and a script to change slightly. He has not signed an exclusivity agreement, but the question arises: is it in breach of contract? In this particular case, whether the contract was violated or not to charge, he did all the work for its new program at work in the museum. If he had done and was carried on working time, it was certainly in breach of contract. Otherwise, it was not.
The business contract he had signed, you can see, is so vague that any of these questions were easy to solve. Although it appears that we have a little more of an edge, it is very difficult to understand how it is going to end. Personally, if I were the judge, I rule against him, but, as his lawyer, I hope that the judge sees things differently. After all, so he had to pay so much money in legal fees it has more than paid his dues.






