There is only one way to record accurately the progress of any branch of the law over a period of time; that is to review all of the cases and statutes affecting it that have been litigated or enacted during the period. This includes all of the cases in the minor courts as well as those in the courts of appeal, unless we arbitrarily limit our subject matter to the work of the higher courts. It is not desirable to fix such a limit
As a co-author of one of the two dozen or more currently-in-print Contracts casebooks, I obviously h...
This is an update of a work done in conjunction with a contract law conference 25 years ago. My spec...
§4.1. Introduction. None of the contract cases decided during the 1963 Survey year requires extensiv...
T HERE is only one way to record accurately the progress of any branch of the law over a period of t...
For all its stability the law of contract has seen a good deal of reform, most of it judge-made, in ...
After a quarter century in active use, this respected title has been revised and expanded in a colla...
As the name shows, this is a volume of illustrative cases. There is no attempt to show the developme...
Lawyers faced with government contract controversies can easily find themselves in a hopeless quanda...
Each chapter clearly identifies and explains the pertinent and often difficult topics within contrac...
This article considers how courts have responded to the inclusion of six innovative rules in the Res...
It has been thirty years since Arthur Corbin\u27s eight-volume treatise on contracts appeared in con...
We embed a simple contracting model with ex-ante investments in which there is scope for Court inter...
“The cases here collected and annotated, have been selected by the undersigned, primarily for the us...
Judicial opinions rarely identify the precise sequence in which the issues presented were addressed ...
In two recent cases, the Supreme Court of the United States held that state legislation had impaired...
As a co-author of one of the two dozen or more currently-in-print Contracts casebooks, I obviously h...
This is an update of a work done in conjunction with a contract law conference 25 years ago. My spec...
§4.1. Introduction. None of the contract cases decided during the 1963 Survey year requires extensiv...
T HERE is only one way to record accurately the progress of any branch of the law over a period of t...
For all its stability the law of contract has seen a good deal of reform, most of it judge-made, in ...
After a quarter century in active use, this respected title has been revised and expanded in a colla...
As the name shows, this is a volume of illustrative cases. There is no attempt to show the developme...
Lawyers faced with government contract controversies can easily find themselves in a hopeless quanda...
Each chapter clearly identifies and explains the pertinent and often difficult topics within contrac...
This article considers how courts have responded to the inclusion of six innovative rules in the Res...
It has been thirty years since Arthur Corbin\u27s eight-volume treatise on contracts appeared in con...
We embed a simple contracting model with ex-ante investments in which there is scope for Court inter...
“The cases here collected and annotated, have been selected by the undersigned, primarily for the us...
Judicial opinions rarely identify the precise sequence in which the issues presented were addressed ...
In two recent cases, the Supreme Court of the United States held that state legislation had impaired...
As a co-author of one of the two dozen or more currently-in-print Contracts casebooks, I obviously h...
This is an update of a work done in conjunction with a contract law conference 25 years ago. My spec...
§4.1. Introduction. None of the contract cases decided during the 1963 Survey year requires extensiv...