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Notes -
That's a really bad guess -- I've even had to deal with people who don't want to (and/or seem unlikely to be able to!) pay my business for services rendered.
I'm not asking about whether you think it was a good idea to deliver the coal or not -- I'm saying that, legally speaking -- the (alleged) buyer was seeking to enforce a contract for ongoing delivery that they appear to have already violated by not paying the late fees that were laid out in the contract. My understanding of these situations is that once a party fails to fulfill some part of their responsibilities under a contract, the counterparty is not no longer bound by the rest of it.
I thought the point of the case was that the coal company didn't want to deliver the coal, and the buyer wanted it -- the business decision seems to have been made?
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