Master Third Circuit clarifies that fixed overhead is part of the seller's expected profit and is not deducted when calculating expectation damages after the buyer's breach. with this comprehensive case brief.
Vitex Manufacturing Corp. v. Caribtex Corp. is a staple in contracts courses because it crisply addresses how to measure expectation damages when a buyer repudiates, especially the treatment of "overhead" in computing lost profits. The case underscores the fundamental remedial goal of contract law: to put the injured party in as good a position as if the contract had been performed, without awarding a windfall or imposing a penalty. In doing so, it bridges legal doctrine with practical accounting concepts like fixed versus variable costs.
For law students, Vitex is a clear illustration that not all costs are created equal. When a contract is breached, only the costs actually avoided because of the breach should reduce the plaintiff's recovery. By holding that fixed overhead is not a "cost saved," the court articulates a durable principle frequently invoked across both goods and services contracts and often discussed alongside UCC damage provisions and the Restatement's expectation-interest framework.
377 F.2d 795 (3d Cir. 1967)
Vitex Manufacturing Corporation operated a textile finishing business in the Virgin Islands and contracted with Caribtex Corporation to process (finish) fabrics supplied by Caribtex for an agreed per-unit charge during a specified operating season. To perform, Vitex reserved plant capacity and stood ready to process Caribtex's goods, incurring general business overhead such as rent, insurance, taxes, and management salaries that were ongoing regardless of any particular job. Before or as performance was to commence, Caribtex repudiated the agreement and failed to tender the goods for processing. Vitex sued for expectation damages, seeking its anticipated profit on the job. A central dispute concerned whether Vitex's fixed overhead should be deducted from its lost-profit calculation as a "cost saved" due to Caribtex's breach. The district court awarded Vitex damages based on its expected profit, treating overhead as part of that profit contribution rather than a deductible cost. Caribtex appealed, arguing that overhead should be treated as a cost saved and subtracted from Vitex's recovery.
In computing the seller's expectation damages after the buyer's repudiation, must the seller's fixed overhead expenses be deducted from the lost-profit award as costs saved by the breach?
Expectation damages place the injured party in the position it would have occupied had the contract been performed, measured by the net profit the party would have realized plus any incidental damages, less costs saved due to the breach. Only those expenses actually avoided because of the breach are deductible; fixed overhead expenses that continue regardless of performance are not "costs saved" and should not be subtracted. Overhead is therefore treated as part of the seller's anticipated profit contribution when computing damages.
No. Fixed overhead is not a cost saved by the breach and should not be deducted from the plaintiff's lost-profit calculation; it is properly included as part of the expected profit the plaintiff would have earned had the contract been performed.
The court reasoned that the law of expectation damages requires subtracting only those expenditures the nonbreaching party actually avoids because of the breach. Overhead expenses such as rent, insurance, general administrative salaries, and similar fixed costs are incurred whether or not a specific contract is performed. As a result, they do not decrease when a buyer repudiates; they persist throughout the relevant period. Because these fixed overhead costs are not avoided, they are not "saved," and therefore they should not reduce the plaintiff's recovery. Economically, overhead functions as a component of the contribution margin—i.e., the portion of contract revenue that first covers fixed overhead and then yields profit. If the contract had gone forward, the price paid by Caribtex would have contributed to Vitex's overhead and then to Vitex's profit. Denying recovery for the overhead component would undercompensate Vitex and defeat the core remedial aim of placing Vitex in its expected position. The court also found that Vitex's proof of anticipated profit, net of variable costs (like labor and materials directly tied to the job) that would have been incurred and thus were saved by the breach, was sufficiently certain. No evidence showed that Vitex's fixed overhead was reduced by the breach or that Vitex could or did mitigate by replacing this specific work within capacity constraints. Consequently, the proper measure was the contract revenue less only the variable, avoidable costs—not fixed overhead.
Vitex is widely cited for the proposition that overhead is part of profit, not a cost to be deducted, in expectation damages. It gives students a practical framework: (1) identify the contract price or revenue stream; (2) subtract only variable costs actually avoided by nonperformance; and (3) do not subtract fixed overhead. The case anchors modern discussions of lost profits under both common-law contracts and UCC damages (particularly in tandem with concepts reflected in UCC § 2-708(2) and Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 347), and it trains students to distinguish fixed from variable costs with precision when proving damages.
Overhead refers to fixed, ongoing business expenses not directly traceable to a specific job—e.g., rent, insurance, depreciation, general administrative salaries, and taxes. In Vitex, these costs did not decrease because of the buyer's breach; therefore, they were not "saved" and should not reduce the expectation damages. The contract revenue would have contributed to covering overhead and thereafter to profit, so overhead was treated as part of the expected profit contribution.
Although Vitex involved a processing arrangement with service-like features, its principle aligns with the UCC's expectation measure: the aggrieved party recovers the benefit of the bargain less costs saved. Under UCC § 2-708(2), where market or resale damages are inadequate, a seller may recover lost profits (including a reasonable allowance for overhead). Vitex's treatment of overhead as part of profit closely mirrors that statutory concept.
The plaintiff must show with reasonable certainty the profit it would have earned but for the breach, typically by establishing: (1) the contract price or revenue; (2) the variable, avoidable costs of performance that were saved (e.g., direct labor and materials); and (3) that fixed overhead was not reduced by the breach. Documentary evidence and accounting testimony often substantiate these elements.
No. The nonbreaching party still must take reasonable steps to mitigate loss. Vitex simply instructs that fixed overhead is not deducted as a cost saved unless evidence shows it was actually avoided. If the plaintiff reasonably could have substituted equally profitable work using the same capacity, the available mitigation could reduce or offset lost-profit damages.
Vitex's core principle—subtract only costs actually saved and treat fixed overhead as part of profit—applies across contract types. In sales-of-goods cases, courts frequently cite Vitex alongside UCC § 2-708(2) to justify including a reasonable allowance for overhead within a lost-profits award when traditional market or resale remedies are inadequate.
Vitex Manufacturing Corp. v. Caribtex Corp. is a leading authority on how to calculate expectation damages when a buyer repudiates. By holding that fixed overhead is not a cost saved and therefore should not be deducted from the plaintiff's recovery, the court ensures that damage awards reflect the economic reality of business operations and the law's goal of placing the nonbreaching party in its expected position.
For students and practitioners, Vitex is a practical blueprint for assembling a lost-profits case: focus on revenue, identify and subtract only variable costs actually avoided, and demonstrate that fixed overhead persists regardless of the breach. This analysis remains central in both common-law and UCC contexts and continues to shape modern damages calculations.
Need to cite this case?
Generate a perfectly formatted Bluebook citation in seconds.
Use our Bluebook Citation Generator →