Master Rhode Island adopts the modern rule that a fair and equitable modification of an executory service contract is enforceable without new consideration when prompted by unanticipated circumstances. with this comprehensive case brief.
Angel v. Murray is a staple contracts case that modernizes the doctrine governing midstream modifications of executory agreements. Traditionally, the preexisting duty rule required new consideration to support any contractual modification, a stance designed to deter opportunistic hold-ups. In Angel v. Murray, the Rhode Island Supreme Court relaxed that rigid rule by embracing Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 89(a), upholding a price increase for a city garbage collection contract when an unexpected and substantial spike in service demands occurred.
The case matters because it illustrates the principled limits on when courts will validate modifications without new consideration: the change must be voluntary, fair and equitable, made before full performance, and prompted by circumstances that were unanticipated when the contract was formed. It also shows how courts analogize to UCC § 2-209's good-faith standard for goods to inform the common law of services, and it addresses the separate question of how public bidding rules interact with bona fide contract modifications in municipal contracting.
Angel v. Murray, 113 R.I. 482, 322 A.2d 630 (R.I. 1974)
The City of Newport entered into a multi-year contract with a private contractor, Maher, to collect and remove refuse from city dwellings. The agreement set a fixed annual price for the term and was formed through the city's competitive bidding process. Historically, Newport experienced negligible growth in the number of dwellings—roughly 20 to 25 additional units per year for decades. After the contract commenced, however, the city experienced a sharp, unexpected increase of approximately 400 new dwellings over a two-year period due to new construction and redevelopment, substantially enlarging the contractor's routes and workload beyond what the parties had contemplated when they agreed to the fixed price. Mid-performance, Maher requested an additional $10,000 for each of two fiscal years to compensate for the unforeseen expansion in work. The City Manager, Murray, recommended approval, and the City Council, by public resolution in each year, granted the increase. A Newport taxpayer, Angel, filed suit seeking to enjoin the payments and to recover sums already paid, arguing that (1) the modification failed for lack of consideration under the preexisting duty rule and (2) the increase violated the city charter's competitive bidding requirements, effectively constituting a new contract without bids. The trial court ruled against the defendants. On appeal, the Rhode Island Supreme Court addressed whether the modification was enforceable and whether the charter's bidding provisions barred it.
Can a municipal service contract be modified mid-performance to increase the price without new consideration where an unanticipated and substantial increase in the contractor's workload has occurred, and does such a modification violate the city charter's competitive bidding requirements?
A modification of an executory contract is enforceable without new consideration if: (1) the modification is voluntary; (2) it is made before the contract has been fully performed by either party; (3) it is fair and equitable; and (4) it is prompted by circumstances not anticipated by the parties when the contract was made. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 89(a). Although UCC § 2-209 (eliminating the consideration requirement for modifications made in good faith for contracts for the sale of goods) does not directly govern service contracts, its good-faith rationale is persuasive by analogy. Bona fide modifications do not violate competitive bidding requirements where they do not constitute the making of a new contract and are reasonably related to unanticipated circumstances arising under the existing agreement.
Yes. The modification was enforceable without new consideration because it was voluntary, made while the contract remained executory, fair and equitable, and based on unanticipated circumstances; and no, it did not violate the city charter's competitive bidding provisions because it was a bona fide modification of an existing contract rather than a new agreement.
The court began by acknowledging the traditional preexisting duty rule, which would normally invalidate a midstream price increase absent new consideration, due to concerns about coercion and hold-ups. However, the court recognized a modern trend—reflected in UCC § 2-209 for goods and in the then-emerging Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 89(a)—that permits modifications made in good faith in response to unanticipated circumstances. Because the contract at issue was for services, the UCC did not apply directly, but its focus on good faith provided a useful framework. The court expressly adopted § 89(a)'s standard for service contracts: a no-consideration modification is valid if the agreement is voluntary, made before full performance, fair and equitable, and prompted by unanticipated conditions. Applying that standard, the court found the sharp increase of approximately 400 dwellings over two years to be a substantial and unanticipated change. The historic pattern—only 20 to 25 new dwellings per year—made it reasonable for both parties at the time of contracting to assume that the workload would remain roughly constant. The increase materially altered the scope and cost of performance beyond what the parties contemplated, justifying reconsideration of price. The timing also mattered: the requests and approvals occurred while obligations remained executory on both sides, fitting squarely within § 89(a). The modification was voluntary and free from coercion. There was no evidence Maher threatened to breach or attempted to leverage the city; rather, he made a request, the city manager independently evaluated it, and the city council approved it publicly by resolution in each of the two years. The amount—$10,000 per year—was modest relative to the unexpected increase in work and, on the record, fair and equitable. On the municipal law issue, the court concluded that the city charter's competitive bidding provisions aim to prevent favoritism and to ensure fiscal integrity in the formation of public contracts. Those policies were not undermined here because the council did not enter into a new contract; it modified an existing one in good faith to address unforeseen circumstances arising during performance. Treating every bona fide adjustment as a brand-new contract would hamstring public administration and ignore commercial realities. Because this was a true modification reasoned from unanticipated conditions, competitively bid at the outset, and publicly vetted and approved, the charter was not violated. Accordingly, the court upheld the modification and rejected the taxpayer's effort to recover the additional payments.
Angel v. Murray is the leading case adopting Restatement (Second) § 89(a), a cornerstone doctrine for contract modifications in service agreements. It tempers the preexisting duty rule by validating fair, good-faith modifications made in response to genuine, unanticipated changes in circumstances while performance remains ongoing. For law students, the case is essential for spotting when consideration is unnecessary in modifications, how courts police for coercion and bad faith, and how public contracting rules intersect with contract doctrine. It is also a prime exam vehicle for applying Restatement § 89(a) factors and analogizing to UCC § 2-209.
No. The decision does not abolish the rule; it creates a recognized exception. A modification to an executory service contract can be enforceable without new consideration if it is voluntary, fair and equitable, made before full performance, and prompted by unanticipated circumstances. Absent these conditions, the traditional preexisting duty rule still applies.
UCC § 2-209 eliminates the consideration requirement for modifications of contracts for the sale of goods, provided the modification is made in good faith. Angel v. Murray analogizes to this policy for service contracts and adopts Restatement (Second) § 89(a). While the UCC does not govern services, its good-faith rationale informs the court's acceptance of no-consideration modifications under specified safeguards.
Unanticipated circumstances are material changes not reasonably contemplated by the parties at contract formation that significantly affect the burden or cost of performance. In Angel, the sudden addition of approximately 400 dwellings—far exceeding the historic 20–25 units per year—materially increased the contractor's workload beyond what the parties could have foreseen, justifying a fair price adjustment.
No. The modification must be voluntary, fair, and equitable; it cannot be procured by duress or coercion. Routine or foreseeable cost fluctuations (e.g., ordinary inflation) typically do not qualify as unanticipated. Courts scrutinize the proportionality of the requested increase and the presence of good faith; opportunistic hold-ups remain unenforceable.
The court treated the council's action as a bona fide modification of an existing, competitively bid contract rather than a new agreement. Competitive bidding laws target favoritism and corruption in contract formation, not genuine, good-faith adjustments necessitated by unforeseen conditions during performance. Because the modification addressed unanticipated circumstances and was publicly approved, the charter was not violated.
Angel v. Murray modernizes contract doctrine by validating fair, good-faith modifications to executory service contracts made in response to genuine, unforeseen changes in circumstances. By adopting Restatement (Second) § 89(a) and drawing on UCC § 2-209's good-faith ethos, the Rhode Island Supreme Court retained safeguards against coercion while recognizing the practical need for flexibility in ongoing performance relationships.
For students and practitioners, the case offers a clear analytic roadmap: identify whether circumstances were unanticipated, confirm the contract remained executory, scrutinize voluntariness and good faith, and assess the fairness of the adjustment. It also underscores that public procurement regimes do not bar bona fide, necessity-driven modifications—a critical point when public entities face evolving realities mid-contract.
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