A preference pact is a contract by which a party undertakes to offer its beneficiary priority to deal with it in the event that it decides to enter into a contract.
When a contract is entered into with a third party in breach of a preference pact, the beneficiary may obtain compensation for the loss suffered. Where the third party was aware of the existence of the pact and the beneficiary’s intention to rely on it, the beneficiary may also bring an action for nullity or ask the court to substitute him for the third party in the contract entered into.
The third party may ask the beneficiary in writing to confirm, within a time limit which it sets and which must be reasonable, the existence of a preference pact and whether it intends to avail itself of it.
The writing shall state that if no reply is received within this period, the beneficiary of the pact may no longer seek its substitution for the contract concluded with the third party or the nullity of the contract.