Commercial law in the United States is designed to facilitate private transactions, and thus to enforce the presumed intent of the parties, who generally are free to negotiate the terms they choose. But these contracts inevitably have gaps, both because the parties cannot anticipate every situation that might arise from their relationship, and because negotiation is not costless. When courts are faced with these gaps in a litigation context, they supply default terms to fill them. These defaults usually are set to reflect what courts believe similar parties would have agreed to if they had addressed the issue. These majoritarian defaults are justified as being most likely to carry out the presumed intentions of the parties. Despite the fr...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
Specific performance is a central contractual remedy but, in Anglo-American law, generally is subord...
Online and offline, relations between consumers and businesses are most frequently governed by consu...
Commercial law in the United States is designed to facilitate private transactions, and thus to enfo...
Commercial law in the United States is designed to facilitate private transactions, and thus to enfo...
The design of default provisions in consumer contracts involves an aspect that does not normally ari...
The common law developed over centuries a small set of default rules that courts have used to fill g...
This paper analyzes standard form contracts between firms and individual consumers (and borrowers). ...
This Article calls for a move to the third phase in courts\u27 attitudes toward consumer contracts. ...
This Article calls for a move to a new phase in courts’ attitudes toward consumer contracts. Current...
In 2012, the American Law Institute asked us to serve as reporters for a new Restatement of Consumer...
The legal rules of contracts and corporations can be divided into two distinct classes. The larger c...
In Section I of this article, I argue that complex risk-allocation models are inconsistent in import...
In this article, I trace the dispute in the courts and before the ALI and NCCUSL over the proper con...
It was once perceived, and still is commonly taught, that default rules in contract law must mimic e...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
Specific performance is a central contractual remedy but, in Anglo-American law, generally is subord...
Online and offline, relations between consumers and businesses are most frequently governed by consu...
Commercial law in the United States is designed to facilitate private transactions, and thus to enfo...
Commercial law in the United States is designed to facilitate private transactions, and thus to enfo...
The design of default provisions in consumer contracts involves an aspect that does not normally ari...
The common law developed over centuries a small set of default rules that courts have used to fill g...
This paper analyzes standard form contracts between firms and individual consumers (and borrowers). ...
This Article calls for a move to the third phase in courts\u27 attitudes toward consumer contracts. ...
This Article calls for a move to a new phase in courts’ attitudes toward consumer contracts. Current...
In 2012, the American Law Institute asked us to serve as reporters for a new Restatement of Consumer...
The legal rules of contracts and corporations can be divided into two distinct classes. The larger c...
In Section I of this article, I argue that complex risk-allocation models are inconsistent in import...
In this article, I trace the dispute in the courts and before the ALI and NCCUSL over the proper con...
It was once perceived, and still is commonly taught, that default rules in contract law must mimic e...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
Specific performance is a central contractual remedy but, in Anglo-American law, generally is subord...
Online and offline, relations between consumers and businesses are most frequently governed by consu...