Paul Davies. JC Smith's The Law of Contract (2018 2 ed). p. 6.
On a slightly different tack, but in a similar vein, Judge Richard Posner has written:17
Suppose I sign a contract to deliver 100,000 custom-ground widgets at \$.10 apiece to A, for use in his boiler factory. After I have delivered 10,000, B comes to me, explains that he desperately needs 25,000 custom-ground widgets at once since otherwise he will be forced to close his pianola factory at great cost, and offers me \$.15 apiece for 25,000 widgets. I sell him the widgets and as a result do not complete timely delivery to A, who sustains \$1000 in damages from my breach. Having obtained an additional profit of \$1250 on the sale to B, I am better off even after reimbursing A for his loss. Society is also better off. Since B was willing to pay me \$.15 per widget, it must mean that each widget was worth at least \$.15 to him. But it was worth only \$.14 to A—\$.10, what he paid, plus \$.04 ($1000 divided by 25,000), his expected profit. Thus the breach resulted in a transfer of the 25,000 widgets from a lower valued to a higher valued use.
17 R Posner, Economic Analysis of the Law (8th edn, Aspen, 2011) 151.
- Pls ELI5. Where does this key equation spring from? I wouldn't have thought to create this to deduce the break-even price?
$(x - \$0.10) \times 100,000 = (x - \$0.10) \times \color{red}{75,000} + 1,000$
- Where's the $\color{red}{\$75,000}$ from?