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Force majeure notices rarely arrive in calm conditions. A supplier says deliveries are suspended. A buyer is exposed downstream. Someone wants an answer, immediately, in writing.
In Australia, the words âforce majeureâ do not carry legal effect on their own. Force majeure is contractual in nature. If the agreement does not contain a clause that grants relief, there is generally nothing to rely on, subject to limited exceptions such as the doctrine of frustration. Most disputes turn less on the headline event and more on the contract and the documents.
Before responding to any force majeure notice, confirm the clause exists and read it carefully. Many businesses respond to a notice or even send one before checking whether it covers the event, what threshold it uses, and what notice requirements it imposes.
Key tip: Read first. Write second.
It is also important not to confuse force majeure with frustration, a narrow common law doctrine that can discharge a contract entirely as to future performance rather than temporarily suspending obligations, an outcome that is often commercially unattractive and why supply agreements routinely include force majeure provisions.
A savvy approach is to carefully map the facts to the clause before sending any acknowledgment or notice: check the event coverage, the trigger threshold (âprevent,â âhinder,â or âmaterially affectâ), and the notice mechanics, including timing, form, and particulars. This step is critical because courts often decide force majeure disputes based on the precise clause language, not the background event, and a rushed response can jeopardise legal rights or create liability downstream.
Practically, pause before replying, acknowledge receipt without accepting validity, reserve all rights, and request short particulars such as which obligation is affected, for what period, and why performance is prevented.
When a force majeure dispute hits, itâs rarely about the big, dramatic event you see in the news. Itâs about the fine print, the timing, and how well you understood your contract before the panic set in. In practice, these disputes almost always pivot on three key points: coverage, causation, and the clauseâs trigger threshold.
Hereâs the truth about force majeure: most businesses panic first and read their contracts second. Coverage is where the trouble starts. Some clauses are specific to floods, strikes, and pandemics. Others are vague âevents beyond reasonable control.â Courts wonât rewrite your contract for you. The psychological trap? You assume anything bad counts. Donât. Take a breath. Look at whatâs actually written. Map it to reality before hitting send.
Then thereâs causation. Itâs not enough to point to chaos in the market or a global event. The question is narrow: did the event actually stop you from doing what the contract says you must do? Often, the real reason is internalâallocation decisions, operational failures, or poor planning. Human nature wants to blame the world, especially under stress. But courts want evidence, not excuses. Your contemporaneous emails, logs, and notes are your proof.
Finally, trigger threshold. Words matter. âPrevented,â âhindered,â âdelayed,â âmaterially affected” theyâre not interchangeable. âImpossibilityâ isnât a magic word either. And rising costs? Only if the clause allows it. Under pressure, founders exaggerate. It feels urgent in the moment, but written words last forever.
Most force majeure clauses impose mechanics on notice, service, timing, particulars, and mitigation steps. Some treat these as conditions to relief. Either way, non-compliance is often decisive.
A notice sent to the wrong address, delivered outside the contractual window, or lacking the required particulars can turn a strong factual case into an unenforceable claim, potentially resulting in a complete loss of force majeure protection.
Where mitigation is required, what matters is what alternatives existed, what was tried, and what was rejected and why. A party that made no attempt to explore a workaround will struggle.
Pattern to watch: A broad notice goes out defectively. The buyer acknowledges it. Two weeks later, the argument is about whether the clause was properly invoked. Do not treat acknowledgement of receipt as acceptance of the validity or effectiveness of the notice. Do not let urgency override compliance.
Hereâs a classic trap: your upstream supplier has a force majeure clause that works one way, and your downstream customer has a clause that works another. Different triggers, different notice windows, different thresholds. You might be in the clear with your supplier, but on the same facts, your customer could claim youâve breached your obligations.
The takeaway: always think in âcontract pairs.â Donât just read your supplierâs clause map it against your customer obligations. Ask yourself: could I invoke the supplier clause and still fail my downstream commitments? If yes, you have a gap that needs fixing before disruption hits. The smartest businesses review their back-to-back exposure as part of standard risk managementânot after the fire starts.
The second trap is less obvious but far more dangerous: sloppy emails, casual chat, or internal notes about diverting supply, protecting margins, or favouring certain customers. Human nature is to vent, rationalise, or coordinate quickly under pressure. But in a dispute, those messages are often more damaging than the notice itself. Judges, arbitrators, or opposing counsel will read every line, and your internal chatter can undo the strongest legal position.
Actionable advice: draft every external communication as if it will be made public in court tomorrow. Keep internal notes factual, neutral, and focused on obligations, mitigation, and timelines. No commentary about margins, allocation preferences, or âstrategicâ choices. If you must discuss options, frame it around compliance with the clause, not commercial convenience.
Pro tip: use a central log for all force majeure correspondence. Date everything, keep it concise, and link it directly to the clause. When the pressure is on, you want a defensible, clean trail that shows discipline, not chaos.
Where a clause covers the event, it will usually displace frustration. Where it does not, frustration may still be argued, but the threshold is high and it is not a substitute for a poorly drafted or poorly invoked clause.
If frustration is established, the contract is discharged as to future performance. In Victoria, the consequences are modified by Part 3.2 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), which replaced the Frustrated Contracts Act 1959 (Vic), repealed from 1 July 2008.
New South Wales and South Australia have separate schemes under the Frustrated Contracts Act 1978 (NSW) and Frustrated Contracts Act 1988 (SA). The detail differs, and the governing law clause should be checked.
If you receive a notice, you rarely need to accept or reject it immediately.
Recommended steps:
For those considering issuing a notice:
Businesses relying on standard supply terms should review:
A short review is considerably cheaper than arguing enforceability after positions have been taken in writing. At Allied Legal, we advise on force majeure clauses and supply contract disputes. If a notice has already arrived, the time to take advice is before a response is sent.