Month: July 2010

ACC Events: Phone-In Q&A Tomorrow, Panel Discussion at Annual Meeting in October

On Wednesday, July 14, the Law Department Management Committee of the Association of Corporate Counsel will be holding their monthly teleconference, and the featured speaker for the half-hour “Legal Quick Hit” portion is yours truly. It will be in the form of a Q&A with the esteemed David Munn, general counsel and director of customer operations at Pramata Corporation. But … Read More

Lexical Ambiguity: What Does “Spinoff” Mean?

I sporadically write about contract instances of lexical ambiguity, which arises when context is insufficient to allow one to determine the sense of a word that has more than one meaning. (See MSCD 6.5 and these three blog posts.) Well, here’s another one for you fans of lexical ambiguity: in this item over at Legal Blog Watch, Bruce Carton describes … Read More

Document-Comparison Etiquette

I recently received the following message from a longtime reader: When you eventually revise MCSD to its third edition, could you consider adding an appendix that talks about redlining protocol? Here’s what routinely happens to me: I send the other side a draft marked using Microsoft Word’s “track changes” feature. Using that feature, they accept some of my changes, reject … Read More

When the Deal Signs and Closes Simultaneously But the Contract Is Structured for a Deferred Closing

In a phone call with a law-firm M&A partner today, I was reminded that sometimes M&A contracts reflect a deferred closing even though the parties actually do a simultanous signing and closing. If the signing and closing are simultaneous, the contract would usually contain deal provisions, representations, indemnification provisions (unless the target is public), and boilerplate, as well as any post-closing … Read More

Can You Recommend a Book on Comparative Contract Law?

A reader asked me what books I could recommend. More specifically, he asked as follows: Say I wanted one book that would give a good treatment of comparative foreign law (French, UK, Belgian, etc), with key discussion on contract remedies available, what would you go with? I haven’t yet had occasion to consult such a book. If you can recommend … Read More

One Person Signing for More than One Party?

A reader recently asked as follows: If someone is signing a contract on behalf of more than one party, and that person serves each party in the same capacity, would it be OK to use just one signature block, as in the following example? ACME HOLDINGS, LLC ACME ACQUISITIONS, LLC ACME INVESTMENTS, LLC By:     ______________________           Richard Roe           President … Read More

When What’s In the Contract Is Inconsistent with the Signature Block

What happens if a contract says that someone is personally liable for an obligation, but that person signs the contract not in their individual capacity, but as an officer of a limited liability company? In this newsletter article, Doug Batey of Stoel Rives considers a recent Washington Court of Appeals opinion that addressed exactly that issue. Here, from Doug’s article, are … Read More

“Together” and “Collectively”

I recently received the following inquiry: I was wondering if you could clarify a point for me and my boss. It has been my understanding that when defining terms in an agreement, it is standard to use the word “together” when referring to two entities only, and to use the word “collectively” when referring to three or more entities. When I recently … Read More