Party A and Party B sign the contract. Who is Party B looking for in case of breach of contract?

It needs to be analyzed according to the specific situation. If Party B breaches the contract, it must be borne by Party B. If there are two, both of them are liable, and the one who has not breached the contract is also liable, which is joint and several liability. Party A jointly sues Party B,

Require continued performance or compensation for losses.

1. According to Article 6 1 of the Contract Law, after the contract comes into effect, the parties may sign a supplementary agreement on matters not stipulated or clearly stipulated in the contract.

Therefore, the parties to a contract can agree on the relevant contents of the contract after reaching an agreement through consultation.

2. The circumstances that can terminate the contract include: a. The purpose of the contract cannot be achieved due to force majeure; B. One party clearly indicates that it will not perform its contractual obligations; C. One party delays the performance of its contractual obligations and fails to do so within a reasonable time after being urged; D the purpose of the contract cannot be achieved due to one party's serious breach of contract; E. others. Therefore, when the purpose of the contract cannot be achieved due to the behavior of the breaching party, the observant party has the right to terminate the contract.

3. Article 107 of the Contract Law stipulates that if one party breaches the contract, it shall bear corresponding liabilities for breach of contract. Taking unqualified quality as an example, Article11of this Law stipulates that if there is no liability for breach of contract, the injured party may reasonably choose to ask the other party to bear the liability for breach of contract such as maintenance and replacement according to the nature of the subject matter and the size of the loss.

Continuing to perform the contract is the liability for breach of contract stipulated in the contract law, the legal obligation that the breaching party must undertake, and the legal right that the non-breaching party enjoys. Whether the breaching party is willing or not, as long as it is possible to continue to perform, the observant party has the right to require the breaching party to continue to perform the obligations agreed in the original contract. 2. Ask the other party to pay liquidated damages. In the cases we have come into contact with, many parties have not agreed on the terms of liquidated damages or liability for breach of contract at all, or although there is an agreement, this agreement is not clear and not operable. For example, "if one party breaches the contract, it shall bear legal responsibility." Because liquidated damages are liquidated damages agreed by the parties in advance, and are not based on actual damage. In other words, whether there is damage or not, as long as there is a clear agreement, the breaching party should pay liquidated damages. Especially in the case of no damage, legal sanctions can be imposed on the defaulting party through agreed liquidated damages. 3. Deposit responsibility. Article 15 of the Contract Law stipulates that "the parties may, in accordance with the provisions of the Guarantee Law, pay a deposit to the other party as a guarantee for the creditor's rights. After the debtor performs the debt, the deposit shall be used as the price or recovered. If the party paying the deposit fails to perform the agreed debt, it has no right to demand the return of the deposit;