Month: March 2009

Right and Wrong in Drafting Usages

Someone who does a lot of presentations to law firms recommended to me that when I field comments from the audience, I should avoid suggesting that I’m right and the speaker is wrong. I understand his point; after all, the customer is, in a larger sense, always right. But I find it hard to be too easygoing. Because contract language … Read More

Presenting Contract Text in Full and in Bullet Points

Longtime reader D.C. Toedt pointed out to me this post on The Consumerist. It applauds the terms of use of a company called Aviary, in that it offers, in bullet points set out to the right of the full version of the terms of use, a plain-English summary of the provisions. (Click here to go to Aviary’s terms of use.) … Read More

“Latent Ambiguity” Is a Confusing Concept

This post isn’t intended for drafters so much as judges and litigators. In a recent bankruptcy case, In re IdleAire Technologies Corp., 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 343 (Bankr. D. Del. Feb. 18, 2009), the court had the following to say about “latent ambiguity”: The plain language of an insurance policy, however, can also be ambiguous, even when there is only one … Read More

Verb Use in the Introductory Clause

Yesterday I got a call from a reader inquiring about verb use in my recommended form of introductory clause. I love that kind of inquiry. More specifically, he pointed to the introductory clause in MSCD sample 1. It begins as follows: This asset purchase agreement is dated May 3, 2008, and is between … He wondered whether it would be … Read More

Some MSCD Testimonials

I’ve belatedly updated the testimonials on the MSCD page of this site. To spare you having to click on the link, I’ve copied the testimonials below. I thank all those who were kind enough to provide testimonials. I have a particular soft spot for the one that potential MSCD readers are least likely to pay attention to, namely the one … Read More

“Best Efforts” Under Canadian Law

In connection with one of my Calgary seminars, someone suggest that my treatment of best efforts doesn’t apply in Canada. I thought I should address that, because if my analysis doesn’t work for Canada, it doesn’t work anywhere. Chapter 7 of MSCD contains my analysis of efforts provisions, and I’ve also done a good number of blog posts on the … Read More

More on “Time Is of the Essence”

Drafters use the phrase time is of the essence to indicate that failure to meet a contract deadline constitutes grounds for termination. But as I explain in MSCD 12.394–403 and in this May 2006 blog post, saying Time is of the essence for purposes of this agreement is problematic, in that such provisions suggest that the draconian termination-for-any-tardiness standard applies … Read More

Notes on a Week in Calgary

I’m at the tail end of a productive week spent in Calgary. Last Thursday I gave a seminar for Petro-Canada and its outside counsel, Fraser Milner Casgrain. On Friday I gave a lunchtime presentation for the Canadian Bar Association Alberta. And today, I gave a seminar for the law department of Enbridge Pipelines. Based on preliminary feedback, those who attended … Read More

Addressing All Eventualities in Contract Procedures

A recent Texas case, XTO Energy, Inc. v. Smith Production, Inc., 2009 WL 442003, No. 14-07-00069-CV (Tex. App. Hous., Feb. 24, 2009), shows why it’s a good idea to be excruciatingly comprehensive when specifying in a contract the procedures to be followed when the parties make important decisions. Appellee Smith was an operator under two joint operating agreements (JOAs) governing … Read More