Blog

Seminar News: Back to Asia in Spring 2013 (and Reminder About Toronto M&A Seminar)

I’m pleased that in spring I’ll be returning to Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok at the request of Marcus Evans to give my two-day seminar “Effective Contract Drafting: Concise Language, Efficient Process.” The dates are 25–26 February (KL) and 28 February–1 March (Bangkok). More details to come. I expect to do additional seminars while I’m in the region. If you’re aware … Read More

Where in Ohio Should I Do a “Drafting Clear Contracts” Seminar?

I’m planning my 2013 seminar dates, and West LegalEdcenter has proposed that in April I do a “Drafting Clearer Contracts” seminar in Ohio. The cities under consideration are Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Columbus. If you might be interested in attending an Ohio seminar, I’d be pleased if you’d use the poll below to let me know which city you’d prefer. For … Read More

The Problem with “Personal Delivery”

The English case Ener-G Holdings PLC v Philip Hormell (discussed in this post) also had to consider what it means to say that notice can be served by “delivering it personally.” In that context, “personally” could relate to the person doing the delivering. After all, one says, “I delivered it personally,” meaning that the speaker was the one who delivered the … Read More

An English Case Involving the Expectation of Relevance

My friend at Melbourne Law School, Andrew Godwin, let me know about an interesting English case, Ener-g Holdings PLC v Philip Hormell (copy here). For a general overview of the case, go here for a summary by McFarlanes. Me, I just want to focus on the two main issues. This post deals with the first of them. Here’s the relevant language: … Read More

Revisiting “Termination” and “Expiration”

Steven Sholk, that indefatigable source of leads, has told me about yet another opinion dealing with a dispute over termination versus expiration. That’s a topic I’ve written about in a few blog posts. In the case at issue, Hamden v. Total Car Franchising Corp., 7:12-CV-00003, 2012 WL 3255598 (W.D. Va. Aug. 7, 2012) (PDF copy here), the court held, among other … Read More

“Wanton”

[Don’t bother reading this post! It has been superseded by this post.] Today another interesting contract word came to my attention—wanton. Here’s my instapost on the subject. Wanton is seriously old-fashioned. It has different meanings. The meaning intended in contracts is, presumably, “having no just foundation or provocation; malicious.” But I’m not sure where wanton is meant to fit. You have intentional misconduct, which involves … Read More

Defining “Gross Negligence” in a Contract?

[Don’t bother reading this post! It has been superseded by this post.] I was pleased to see that today D.C. Toedt posted on his blog this item about defining gross negligence in a contract. It’s something that I’d idly thought about before consigning it to a far corner of my mind. In his post, D.C. considers the caselaw regarding the … Read More

Don’t State that the Parties Intend to Be Legally Bound

For the heck of it, let’s go back to basics. Generally, no purpose is served by stating, in the introductory clause or elsewhere, that the parties intend to be legally bound. The approach under U.S. law is summarized by section 21 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts, which states that “Neither real nor apparent intention that a promise be legally … Read More

Court Describes Contract Language as “Gibberish”

The reader who goes by the name A. Wright Burke, M. Phil., told me about this article by Edmund H. Mahoney in the Hartford Courant. It describes how in Pac. Employers Ins. Co. v. Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co., 3:11CV924 MRK, 2012 WL 3202934 (D. Conn. Aug. 3, 2012) (PDF copy here), the judge describes as “gibberish” the insurance-policy provision at issue … Read More

“Concedes That”

Today I received an email from longtime blog reader Elliot Miller inquiring about concedes that. I hadn’t previously encountered that usage, so of course I searched for it on the SEC’s EDGAR system. If you exclude its use in conditional clauses (If Acme concedes that …) and language of discretion (Acme may concede that …), where it plays a supporting … Read More