Hochster v. De La Tour, 118 Eng. Rep. 922 (Q.B. 1853)
Hochster v. De La Tour (1853) is the foundational English case establishing the doctrine of anticipatory repudiation (also called anticipatory breach).
Can a party sue for breach of contract immediately after the other party repudiates before the time for performance, or must the non-breaching party wait until the performance date to bring an action?
When one party to an executory contract clearly and unequivocally repudiates the contract before the time for performance, the non-breaching party may immediately treat the repudiation as a breach and sue for damages. The non-breaching party is not required to wait until the performance date. This doctrine is known as anticipatory repudiation or anticipatory breach.
The court held that Hochster could sue immediately after De La Tour's repudiation. The clear renunciation of the contract before the performance date entitled Hochster to treat it as an immediate breach and seek damages without waiting until June 1. The anticipatory repudiation gave rise to an immediate cause of action.
Hochster established the doctrine of anticipatory repudiation, one of the most important doctrines in contract law. The case is foundational for understanding how contracts can be breached before the time for performance and how non-breaching parties can respond. The doctrine has been adopted in American law and codified in UCC § 2-610. It demonstrates the law's pragmatic approach to breach - recognizing that clear repudiation should trigger immediate rights and remedies rather than forcing parties into an artificial waiting period.