There is a longstanding debate about whether courts should enforce contract terms purporting to limit the parties\u27 liability for fraud. Less often noticed is that many contracts are designed to incorporate fraud liability, by requiring one party to make representations about her performance that, if false, can satisfy the elements of deceit. Such contractual representations are best understood as members of a broader, hitherto underappreciated category of contract terms: duties designed to increase the other party\u27s chances of recovering for breach. Examples include the duty to keep records, to share information about performance, to permit audits, or not to hide breach. This Article shows that difficulties in proving proximate harm e...
Experience is complex. The job of theory is to simplify and unify, to abstract from the blooming, bu...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
There is a longstanding debate about whether courts should enforce contract terms purporting to limi...
The majority of American jurisdictions do not allow punitive damages for breach of contract unless t...
The idea of extracompensatory damages for abusive breach of contract presents a fundamental conflict...
© 2010 Dr. Katy Eloise BarnettThe award of the remedy of an account of profits (or ‘disgorgement dam...
Economic analysis suggests that to give a contract promise a general remedy that would require a bre...
The “sufficient writing” requirements of the Statute of Frauds were formulated with bargain-based co...
Legal duties are created by society for any sort of reason that seems good to society. Thus, where a...
This is the first article that identifies contracts whose breach could cause non-pecuniary losses. I...
Breach of contract may occur by the fault of party in breach. There is a variety of degrees in contr...
In this Article, Professor Allen Blair examines the enforceability of no-reliance clauses--contractu...
What is the role of contract law in remedying breach? The question of the appropriate legal remedy, ...
A long and distinguished line of law-and-economics articles has established that in many circumstanc...
Experience is complex. The job of theory is to simplify and unify, to abstract from the blooming, bu...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
There is a longstanding debate about whether courts should enforce contract terms purporting to limi...
The majority of American jurisdictions do not allow punitive damages for breach of contract unless t...
The idea of extracompensatory damages for abusive breach of contract presents a fundamental conflict...
© 2010 Dr. Katy Eloise BarnettThe award of the remedy of an account of profits (or ‘disgorgement dam...
Economic analysis suggests that to give a contract promise a general remedy that would require a bre...
The “sufficient writing” requirements of the Statute of Frauds were formulated with bargain-based co...
Legal duties are created by society for any sort of reason that seems good to society. Thus, where a...
This is the first article that identifies contracts whose breach could cause non-pecuniary losses. I...
Breach of contract may occur by the fault of party in breach. There is a variety of degrees in contr...
In this Article, Professor Allen Blair examines the enforceability of no-reliance clauses--contractu...
What is the role of contract law in remedying breach? The question of the appropriate legal remedy, ...
A long and distinguished line of law-and-economics articles has established that in many circumstanc...
Experience is complex. The job of theory is to simplify and unify, to abstract from the blooming, bu...
The remedy of expectancy damages in contract law is conventionally described as strict liability for...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...