Force majeure
An unforeseeable event beyond a party's control that excuses non-performance of a contract.
Definici贸n
Force majeure refers to extraordinary events, such as natural disasters, war, or government action, that prevent a party from performing and that the party could not reasonably foresee or avoid. When it applies, the affected party is generally not liable for damages caused by the delay or non-performance. Dutch law addresses this as overmacht in article 6:75, and contracts usually define qualifying events expressly.
Ejemplo
A factory shutdown ordered by the government during a pandemic prevents timely delivery; the supplier invokes the force majeure clause.
Por qu茅 es un riesgo para la empresa
A vague or missing force majeure clause can leave a business exposed on both sides: unable to excuse its own non-performance, or unable to terminate a supplier that stops delivering. The Covid-19 disruptions showed that many standard clauses did not list pandemics or government shutdowns, forcing expensive litigation about coverage.
C贸mo gestionarlo
- Define qualifying events explicitly in the clause: a list plus a catch-all is more robust than a catch-all alone.
- Set notice obligations: the affected party should be required to notify promptly and keep the other party updated.
- Specify the consequences: suspension only, or termination after a defined period of continued impossibility.
- Check your supply chain contracts simultaneously: if your supplier can invoke force majeure, you need the same right against your customer.
Referencias legales
Salvo indicaci贸n en contrario, las referencias remiten al derecho neerland茅s (Burgerlijk Wetboek, el C贸digo Civil neerland茅s); los instrumentos de la UE como el RGPD se aplican en toda la UE. Se trata de informaci贸n general, no de asesoramiento legal. Otras jurisdicciones tratan estos conceptos de forma distinta. Verifique el texto vigente y su situaci贸n con un abogado cualificado.
Preguntas frecuentes
Preguntas comunes sobre este t茅rmino.