Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 72 § 72.2100 — Delegation of performance; assignment of rights
Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 72 ·
Oregon Code § 72.2100·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Delegation of performance; assignment of rights.
(1) A party may perform the duty
of the party through a delegate unless otherwise agreed or unless the other
party has a substantial interest in having the original promisor perform or
control the acts required by the contract. No delegation of performance
relieves the party delegating of any duty to perform or any liability for
breach.
(2) Except as
otherwise provided in ORS 79A.4060, unless otherwise agreed, all rights of
either seller or buyer can be assigned except where the assignment would
materially change the duty of the other party, or increase materially the
burden or risk imposed on the other party by the contract, or impair materially
the chance of the other party obtaining return performance. A right to damages
for breach of the whole contract or a right arising out of the assignors due
performance of the entire obligation of the assignor can be assigned despite
agreement otherwise.
(3) The creation,
attachment, perfection or enforcement of a security interest in the sellers
interest under a contract is not a transfer that materially changes the duty of
or increases materially the burden or risk imposed on the buyer or impairs
materially the buyers chance of obtaining return performance within the
purview of subsection (2) of this section unless, and then only to the extent
that, enforcement actually results in a delegation of material performance of
the seller. Even in that event, the creation, attachment, perfection and
enforcement of the security interest remain effective, but (i) the seller is
liable to the buyer for damages caused by the delegation to the extent that the
damages could not reasonably be prevented by the buyer, and (ii) a court having
jurisdiction may grant other appropriate relief, including cancellation of the
contract for sale or an injunction against enforcement of the security interest
or consummation of the enforcement.
(4) Unless the
circumstances indicate the contrary a prohibition of assignment of the
contract is to be construed as barring only the delegation to the assignee of
the assignors performance.
(5) An assignment
of the contract or of all my rights under the contract or an assignment in
similar general terms is an assignment of rights and unless the language or the
circumstances (as in an assignment for security) indicate the contrary, it is a
delegation of performance of the duties of the assignor and its acceptance by
the assignee constitutes a promise by the assignee to perform those duties.
This promise is enforceable by either the assignor or the other party to the
original contract.
(6) The other
party may treat any assignment which delegates performance as creating
reasonable grounds for insecurity and may without prejudice to the rights of
the other party against the assignor demand assurances from the assignee as
provided in ORS 72.6090. [1961 c.726 §72.2100; 2001 c.445 §133]
GENERAL OBLIGATION AND
CONSTRUCTION OF CONTRACT
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Delegation of performance; assignment of rights. AI-powered analysis coming soon.
Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 72.2100
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
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