People are often ignorant about the legal rules that govern the most common transactions in their lives. This Article analyzes one common regulatory response to our widespread legal ignorance. A surprisingly broad range of legal rules have the ostensible purpose of inducing sophisticated parties to draft express contract language that will inform their contractual partners about the legal rules governing a particular transaction. However, this “legal-informationforcing” objective often remains unrealized because people routinely sign contracts without reading and understanding their terms. In theory, courts could design information-forcing rules that would be truly informative. But recognizing the potential futility of attempts to inform ma...
Whenever a rule is contractible, the law must establish separate rules governing how private parties...
The problem of contract interpretation presents courts with significant questions about the nature a...
This Article was written to test a hypothesis, namely, that it is easy to get into a contract but ve...
Although assent is the doctrinal and theoretical hallmark of contract, its relevance for form contra...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
Many people have false beliefs about contract doctrine. That pervasive phenomenon has profound prac...
What parties know and think they know about contract law affects their obligations under the law and...
Contracts between firms and consumers are regulated extensively. Courts and legislatures prohibit th...
This Article first places Bond in the context of the Supreme Court’s growing reliance on interpretiv...
Contracts have been reviled since before the Marx Brothers\u27 infamous there ain\u27t no Sanity Cl...
The growing popularity of e-commerce transactions revives the perennial question of consumer contrac...
Contract interpretation remains the largest single source of contract litigation between business fi...
Rapid societal and technological changes - such as the rise in electronic commerce, increasing diver...
Much scholarship questioning the enforcement of standard form contract terms offers interesting insi...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
Whenever a rule is contractible, the law must establish separate rules governing how private parties...
The problem of contract interpretation presents courts with significant questions about the nature a...
This Article was written to test a hypothesis, namely, that it is easy to get into a contract but ve...
Although assent is the doctrinal and theoretical hallmark of contract, its relevance for form contra...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
Many people have false beliefs about contract doctrine. That pervasive phenomenon has profound prac...
What parties know and think they know about contract law affects their obligations under the law and...
Contracts between firms and consumers are regulated extensively. Courts and legislatures prohibit th...
This Article first places Bond in the context of the Supreme Court’s growing reliance on interpretiv...
Contracts have been reviled since before the Marx Brothers\u27 infamous there ain\u27t no Sanity Cl...
The growing popularity of e-commerce transactions revives the perennial question of consumer contrac...
Contract interpretation remains the largest single source of contract litigation between business fi...
Rapid societal and technological changes - such as the rise in electronic commerce, increasing diver...
Much scholarship questioning the enforcement of standard form contract terms offers interesting insi...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
Whenever a rule is contractible, the law must establish separate rules governing how private parties...
The problem of contract interpretation presents courts with significant questions about the nature a...
This Article was written to test a hypothesis, namely, that it is easy to get into a contract but ve...