§4.1. Introduction. The 1961 Annual Suroey of American Law pointed to the Uniform Commercial Code as the most significant development in the law of contracts during recent years. This statute, with its many provisions affecting the rules of offer and acceptance, consideration, unconscionable agreements and other aspects of the contractual relationship, will undoubtedly have a substantial effect upon traditional contract concepts. At the very least, there has been a shift from the Willistonian rigidity to Llewellynian flexibility in contracts involving the sale of personal property. Furthermore, with the natural tendency of some courts to reason by analogy and apply the theme of a statute to situations not technically within its scope, the C...
This classic casebook offers first-year students a solid and inviting introduction to contract law, ...
This work provides a detailed overview of the most salient features of recent uniform contract law c...
Revised and updated to 2006, the fourth edition of Contracting Law continues the clear explanations ...
§4.1. Introduction. The 1961 Annual Suroey of American Law pointed to the Uniform Commercial Code as...
§6.1. General. The most important development of the decade in contract law has been the gradual acc...
Well-rooted in modern commercial law is the idea that the law and the obligations that it enforces s...
The emphasis of this article reflects the degree to which commercial law today is statutory. Particu...
The traditional model of contract interpretation focuses on the meeting of the minds. Parties agre...
A goal of the Uniform Commercial Code is to provide rules that respond to commercial reality so that...
The idea of contract no longer has the prestige that it once did. No one would write today, as Maine...
A series of seminar lectures given by Whitmore Gray in Tokyo, Japan during October 1968. Six article...
Written for practicing attorneys, this resource covers all aspects of contract law. Encompasses a br...
The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods aspires to the role o...
Since the last edition was completed at the end of 2004 most of the changes that have occurred in th...
Modern society is unthinkable without the possibility to conclude binding contracts. Not only that c...
This classic casebook offers first-year students a solid and inviting introduction to contract law, ...
This work provides a detailed overview of the most salient features of recent uniform contract law c...
Revised and updated to 2006, the fourth edition of Contracting Law continues the clear explanations ...
§4.1. Introduction. The 1961 Annual Suroey of American Law pointed to the Uniform Commercial Code as...
§6.1. General. The most important development of the decade in contract law has been the gradual acc...
Well-rooted in modern commercial law is the idea that the law and the obligations that it enforces s...
The emphasis of this article reflects the degree to which commercial law today is statutory. Particu...
The traditional model of contract interpretation focuses on the meeting of the minds. Parties agre...
A goal of the Uniform Commercial Code is to provide rules that respond to commercial reality so that...
The idea of contract no longer has the prestige that it once did. No one would write today, as Maine...
A series of seminar lectures given by Whitmore Gray in Tokyo, Japan during October 1968. Six article...
Written for practicing attorneys, this resource covers all aspects of contract law. Encompasses a br...
The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods aspires to the role o...
Since the last edition was completed at the end of 2004 most of the changes that have occurred in th...
Modern society is unthinkable without the possibility to conclude binding contracts. Not only that c...
This classic casebook offers first-year students a solid and inviting introduction to contract law, ...
This work provides a detailed overview of the most salient features of recent uniform contract law c...
Revised and updated to 2006, the fourth edition of Contracting Law continues the clear explanations ...