Month: February 2010

General Writing or Contract Drafting: Which Is More Demanding?

Today I came upon yet another article exploring law students’ lack of basic writing skills: Aïda M. Alaka, The Grammar Wars Come to Law School, 59 J. Legal Educ. 343 (2010). (Click here to go to a pdf copy.) Professor Alaka notes that “many, if not most, legal writing instructors have been surprised by the sometimes astounding lack of basic … Read More

“Fraud” and “Intentional Misrepresentation”

The other day a law-firm partner who specializes in M&A called me to discuss the terms fraud and intentional misrepresentation. He noted that it’s commonplace for both terms to be used in specifying exceptions to limits on indemnification. Here’s the sort of provision he was referring to (I haven’t attempted to clean it up): Notwithstanding the above, the Basket and … Read More

ECC Capital Corp. Sues Law Firms for Contract-Drafting Malpractice

The following is from this article by Drew Combs on the AmLaw Daily: Latham & Watkins and Manatt Phelps & Phillips are the targets of a malpractice lawsuit filed by ECC Capital Corp., which accuses the firms of botching a deal to sell its mortgage-origination business and a subprime-loan portfolio to Bear Stearns & Co. … In the suit–filed on … Read More

LTN Article on the Hidden Perils of Boilerplate

On the Law Technology News website is “The Law of Unintended E-Consequences,” an interesting article by Stanley P. Jaskiewicz, a member of the Philadelphia law firm of Spector Gadon & Rosen. It discusses how boilerplate that is easily skimmed over can end up acquiring unexpected significance. The article mentions me, but that’s not how it came to my attention. Honest.

“Proprietary”

This from reader Chris Lemens: This bugs me. I see a lot of nondisclosure agreements. A typical definition of the information protected by such an agreement includes a notion that the information is “confidential or proprietary.” The “proprietary” part just seems wrong to me. So what if the information is owned as property? A company’s website is owned as property, … Read More

Kicking the Tires of WestlawNext

Last week I was at West’s headquarters in Eagan, Minnesota, with a dozen or so journalists and bloggers, attending a series of presentations on WestlawNext, the next generation of Westlaw. After some five years of development, it’s being launched today. Others who were in Eagan with me have already offered their thoughts on WestlawNext. I now do so. And I … Read More