In his classic monograph, The Death of Contract, Grant Gilmore argued that Christopher Columbus Langdell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Samuel Williston trumped up the legal credentials for their classical bargain theory of contract law. Gilmore\u27s analysis has been subjected to extensive criticism, but its specific, sustained, and fundamental charge that the bargain theory was based on a fraudulent misrepresentation of precedential authority has never been questioned. In this Essay, I argue that Gilmore\u27s case against the classical theorists rests on the suppressed premise that the precedential authority of cases resides in the express judicial reasoning used to decide them. In contrast, I argue that the classical theorists implicitly pr...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
It has been thirty years since Arthur Corbin\u27s eight-volume treatise on contracts appeared in con...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
In his classic monograph, The Death of Contract, Grant Gilmore argued that Christopher Columbus Lang...
In his classic monograph, The Death of Contract, Grant Gilmore argued that Christopher Columbus Lang...
Autonomy and economic theories of contract seem to provide incompatible accounts of contract law. In...
It is a universally acknowledged truth that we live in a formalist era—at least when it comes to Ame...
Scholars have expended considerable energy in the effort to discover a normative theory of Contrac...
This article identifies a set of methodological commitments that help to explain the methodological ...
The past three decades have seen an enormous amount of writing by Anglo-American scholars about cont...
Formalism has a bad name. It is often seen as a naïve and unsophisticated approach to the adjudicati...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
This paper addresses two related questions. The first relates to Langdell and his development of a ...
In this Essay, I wish to build on Professor Waldron\u27s thoughtful analysis by saying something mor...
Is the domain of contract waxing or waning? Lawrence Friedman\u27s pathbreaking 1965 book, Contract ...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
It has been thirty years since Arthur Corbin\u27s eight-volume treatise on contracts appeared in con...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
In his classic monograph, The Death of Contract, Grant Gilmore argued that Christopher Columbus Lang...
In his classic monograph, The Death of Contract, Grant Gilmore argued that Christopher Columbus Lang...
Autonomy and economic theories of contract seem to provide incompatible accounts of contract law. In...
It is a universally acknowledged truth that we live in a formalist era—at least when it comes to Ame...
Scholars have expended considerable energy in the effort to discover a normative theory of Contrac...
This article identifies a set of methodological commitments that help to explain the methodological ...
The past three decades have seen an enormous amount of writing by Anglo-American scholars about cont...
Formalism has a bad name. It is often seen as a naïve and unsophisticated approach to the adjudicati...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
This paper addresses two related questions. The first relates to Langdell and his development of a ...
In this Essay, I wish to build on Professor Waldron\u27s thoughtful analysis by saying something mor...
Is the domain of contract waxing or waning? Lawrence Friedman\u27s pathbreaking 1965 book, Contract ...
The law of contracts is complex but remarkably stable. What we lack is a widely accepted interpretat...
It has been thirty years since Arthur Corbin\u27s eight-volume treatise on contracts appeared in con...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...