This article considers how courts have responded to the inclusion of six innovative rules in the Restatement (Second) of the Law of Contracts. It observes that most courts simply have deferred to the new rules. In the vast majority of cases, courts gave no reasons for their decisions to embrace the six rules. They simply cited them as they would cite a statute or code and did not question their authority. This practice raises an important normative question: Should courts follow the Restatement (Second) as readily as they currently do? The article concludes that, although some arguments counsel against deference to an academic work such as the Restatement (Second), on balance, the practice does more good than harm. By deferring to the Resta...
The publication of the completed Restatement of the Law of Contracts makes officially available the ...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
This article considers how courts have responded to the inclusion of six innovative rules in the Res...
By any measure, section 211 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts is a disappointment. The sectio...
Recent decisions have brought about a number of changes in the area of contract interpretation. Alth...
This article begins with a brief discussion of restitution as a remedy for breach of contract under ...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
In two recent cases, the Supreme Court of the United States held that state legislation had impaired...
This article argues that contractual change is inherently problematic because contract and change ar...
The first portion of this article will examine the growing inclination of courts to apply tort princ...
Contracts have been reviled since before the Marx Brothers\u27 infamous there ain\u27t no Sanity Cl...
The Supreme Court has vastly expanded the applicability of arbitration legislation, making it applic...
For all its stability the law of contract has seen a good deal of reform, most of it judge-made, in ...
This Article argues that a cornerstone assumption of contemporary contracts scholarship is misleadin...
The publication of the completed Restatement of the Law of Contracts makes officially available the ...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
This article considers how courts have responded to the inclusion of six innovative rules in the Res...
By any measure, section 211 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts is a disappointment. The sectio...
Recent decisions have brought about a number of changes in the area of contract interpretation. Alth...
This article begins with a brief discussion of restitution as a remedy for breach of contract under ...
Professor Stewart Macaulay wondered in 1959 whether restitution, a set of doctrines applied in a wid...
In two recent cases, the Supreme Court of the United States held that state legislation had impaired...
This article argues that contractual change is inherently problematic because contract and change ar...
The first portion of this article will examine the growing inclination of courts to apply tort princ...
Contracts have been reviled since before the Marx Brothers\u27 infamous there ain\u27t no Sanity Cl...
The Supreme Court has vastly expanded the applicability of arbitration legislation, making it applic...
For all its stability the law of contract has seen a good deal of reform, most of it judge-made, in ...
This Article argues that a cornerstone assumption of contemporary contracts scholarship is misleadin...
The publication of the completed Restatement of the Law of Contracts makes officially available the ...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...