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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Impracticability

Impracticability \Im*prac`ti*ca*bil"i*ty\, n.; pl. Impracticabilities.

  1. The state or quality of being impracticable; infeasibility.
    --Goldsmith.

  2. An impracticable thing.

  3. Intractableness; stubbornness.

Wiktionary
impracticability

n. 1 The quality or condition of being impracticable. 2 An impracticable thing.

WordNet
impracticability

n. the quality of not being usable [syn: impracticableness] [ant: practicability, practicability]

Wikipedia
Impracticability

The doctrine of impracticability in the common law of contracts excuses performance of a duty, where that duty has become unfeasibly difficult or expensive for the party who was to perform.

Impracticability is similar in some respects to the doctrine of impossibility because it is triggered by the occurrence of a condition which prevents one party from fulfilling the contract. The major difference between the two doctrines is that while impossibility excuses performance where the contractual duty cannot physically be performed, the doctrine of impracticability comes into play where performance is still physically possible, but would be very burdensome for the party whose performance is due. Thus, impossibility is an objective condition, whereas impracticability is a subjective condition for a court to determine.

Typically, the test U.S. courts use for impracticability is as follows (with a few variations among different jurisdictions):

  1. There must be an occurrence of a condition, the nonoccurrence of which was a basic assumption of the contract,
  2. The occurrence must make performance extremely expensive or difficult
  3. This difficulty was not anticipated by the parties to the contract (note: some jurisdictions require that there be no measure within the contract itself to allocate risk between the parties)

Usage examples of "impracticability".

But I soon realized the impracticability of such a plan, for even supposing that I should succeed in finding my way to her heart, was I the man to resist my own success with such a woman?

And though the impracticability of executing the law has caused its repeal in several of the States which had adopted it, including the one from which it derives its name, an attempt has notwithstanding been commenced, and is prosecuted with considerable zeal by many of the professed philanthropists, to agitate for a similar law in this country.