Month: May 2007

Illinois Case Provides Great Example of Syntactic Ambiguity

A recent Illinois case, Regency Commercial Assocs., LLC v. Lopax, Inc., 2007 Ill. App. LEXIS 476 (Ill. App. Ct. May 4, 2007), provides a great example of how syntactic ambiguity can really make a mess of a contractual relationship. (Click here for a copy of this case.) The predecessor of the plaintiff Regency sold to the defendant Lopax land to … Read More

Contract Lifecycle Management—Q&A with Ashif Mawji, President of Upside Software Inc.

For this first post in an occasional series about contract lifecycle management (for more background, see this introductory post), Ashif Mawji, president of Upside Software Inc., was kind enough to take the time to speak with me. Q: Ashif, your contract lifecycle management (CLM) product is UpsideContract, which is now in Version 5. In a nutshell, what does it aim … Read More

Contract Lifecycle Management—Some Preliminary Thoughts

My interest in contract language is largely a function of my interest in process. In particular, readers of this blog will be familiar with my interest in document assembly. An industry has built up around helping companies manage all aspects of the contract process; the discipline is referred to as “contract lifecycle management,” or CLM. (As a business catchphrase, it’s … Read More

Avoiding Arguments Over Whether Singular Also Means Plural

Today’s case from the drafting hall of shame is a case recently decided by the Nebraska Supreme Court, Coral Production Corp. v. Central Resources, Inc., 273 Neb. 379 (Neb. 2007). This case arose out of a dispute between owners of fractional working interests in oil and gas assets. When Central put its oil and gas assets up for sale, Coral … Read More

Adams Does “ABA Book Briefs” Podcast

The latest addition to the American Bar Association’s series of “ABA Book Briefs” podcasts is an interview with yours truly. In it, I talk for ten minutes about MSCD and some current issues in contract drafting. Click here to listen to it. Regular readers of this blog will find that the podcast doesn’t contain any earth-shattering secrets. But it does … Read More

Who Owns the Copyright, Outside Counsel or the Client?

Last year the New York Law Journal published my article “Copyright and the Contract Drafter.” I’d now like to revisit who owns copyright in a contract, outside counsel or the client. To set the scene, here’s an extract of my article: A client asks its law firm to draft a form of agreement for a new kind of transaction. The … Read More

EchoSign—A Signature Automation Solution

IACCM‘s email updates are a reliable source of interesting leads, and the April update was no exception, in that it mentioned EchoSign, a company that offers a “signature automation solution” of the same name. Here’s how EchoSign (the product) works: You email a contract for signature through EchoSign. EchoSign automatically adds a machine-readable fax cover sheet bearing an EchoSign fax … Read More

“Software” Page Restored

Late last year I created the “Software” page of this site to describe how the Numbering Assistant—a popular paragraph-numbering utility offered by Payne Consulting Group—has added to its preloaded enumeration schemes the “articles” and “no articles” versions of the enumeration scheme recommended in MSCD. The Numbering Assistant offers, at a nominal price, a painless way for any drafter, and any … Read More