Month: March 2010

“Terms and Conditions”

A particularly prevalent usage is terms and conditions (and the shorthand T&Cs). Heck, it even surfaces in the everyday world—I’ve been known to throw a slipper at the TV when, at the end of a car ad, some voiceover guy drones on about how “terms, conditions, and limitations apply.” You can always do better than terms and conditions. Sometimes, as … Read More

An AdamsDrafting Mini-Exhibit of Contract-Drafting Art: Recent Illustrations by Russell Christian

Contrary to reputation, I’m not just a dry-as-dust, express-the-meaning-of-the-parties guy. I have a sensitive, truth-and-beauty side too. And to demonstrate that, I now bring you—cue tasteful music—the first AdamsDrafting art exhibit! It showcases the work of Russell Christian, a talented illustrator. And it was made possible by that noted patron of the arts, Business Integrity, developer of ContractExpress document-assembly software … Read More

How Not to Specify Jurisdiction

I generally explain the concept of ambiguity by saying that if reasonable people read a given contract provision and derive different meanings from it, that provision is ambiguous. But that doesn’t quite capture the problem that alternative meanings pose for the contract drafter. It’s not only the reasonable reader that you’re worried about. Instead, you’re worried about anyone, reasonable or … Read More

Upgrades and Fixes to this Site

I launched this site in 2006, and recently it’s been showing its age. That’s not entirely due to sloth on my part, as getting anything adjusted had become a protracted annoyance. So recently I engaged web designer Tom Leadbetter, and here’s what we did: The left-hand column is wider, to take into account that people have been migrating to wider monitors. I … Read More

My NYLJ Article Critiquing the AAA Standard Arbitration Clause

Today’s issue of the New York Law Journal contains my article “The AAA Standard Arbitration Clause: Room for Improvement.” Click here to go to a pdf copy. (It’s also available here if you subscribe to the New York Law Journal.) It was fun to write, and here’s why: I got to revisit a topic, arising out of or relating to, that … Read More

Negotiating Around the Duty of Good Faith

In this May 2007 blog post I mentioned the dispute between Crusader Entertainment and schlockmeister Clive Cussler. In this post, the ContractsProf Blog provides the latest installment in this gripping saga—an opinion by a California appellate court. Here’s the bit that caught my eye: On the key issue in the appeal, the court found that Cussler had a contractual right … Read More

Adding General Terms to a Stand-Alone Purchase Order

My recent post on stand-alone purchase orders prompted a related thought: When you issue a stand-alone purchase order (in other words, one not issued under a master contract), you could incorporate the general terms (in other words, everything that doesn’t relate to deal-specific matters such as product and price) in different ways. You could include them with the purchase order, … Read More

Tacking an Acknowledgment on to the End of a Contract

You sometimes see a contract that has a paragraph entitled “Acknowledgement” added at the end, after the party signatures. For example, a search on the SEC’s EDGAR system quickly retrieved this document, a “forebearance agreement and amendment to indenture” between Gulfstream International Group, Inc. and Shelter Island Opportunity Fund, LLC. Here’s what came after their signature blocks: ACKNOWLEDGMENT AND AGREEMENT … Read More