Breach of Contract — Small Claims Court Guide

Breach of Contract

Book 9 of 10

Breach of Contract

Enforce agreements, prove breach, and recover money

By Capra Academy · Published April 14, 2026 · 61 pages

About This Book

From verbal agreements to written contracts — learn how to identify breach, calculate damages, and win in small claims court. Includes common contract clauses, consideration requirements, evidence standards, and state-by-state statute of frauds rules.

What’s Inside

  • Contract Validity Checklist
  • Breach Classification
  • Damages Calculation
  • Evidence Standards
  • Verbal Contract Rules
  • Statute of Frauds Guide

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Frequently Asked Questions

What qualifies as breach of contract in small claims court?

A breach occurs when one party fails to fulfill their obligations under a written or verbal agreement. Examples include not delivering goods, not completing work, or not paying as agreed. You must show a valid contract existed and was violated.

Do I need a written contract to sue for breach?

No. Verbal contracts are enforceable in many situations, though harder to prove. Written contracts, emails, text messages, and other documentation can all serve as evidence of an agreement.

What is the difference between a material breach and a minor breach?

A material breach is serious enough to undermine the entire agreement — you can sue for full damages. A minor breach means most of the contract was fulfilled but with some deficiency — you can sue for the difference in value but may need to fulfill your end of the deal.

What damages can I recover for breach of contract?

You can recover ‘expectation damages’ — what you would have received if the contract was performed. This includes direct losses, costs to fix the problem (cover damages), and sometimes consequential losses if they were foreseeable at the time the contract was made.

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