Ken Adams

What Does “Subcontractor” Mean?

In its recent opinion in Mosser Construction, Inc. v. Travelers Indemnity Co. (go here for a PDF copy), the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals devotes several pages to the meaning of “subcontractor” for purposes of an insurance policy. Why? Because “subcontractor” exhibits lexical ambiguity: Is any supplier to the contractor a subcontractor, or is something more required? I’ll leave you … Read More

Westlaw Form Builder?

Last week Thomson Reuters announced the launch of Westlaw Form Builder: Westlaw Form Builder has been launched—an online document assembly tool that helps attorneys find, assemble and review legal forms with greater speed and accuracy. Attorneys can access more than 20,000 forms anytime and anywhere they have an Internet connection. Forms are customizable, continually updated by Westlaw editors, and have … Read More

Whistleblowers and Confidentiality Agreements

I’m revising the guidance to Koncision’s confidentiality-agreement template to note that being bound by a confidentiality agreement might not preclude an employee from acting as a whistleblower and disclosing information that might otherwise be covered by the confidentiality agreement. In that regard, consider section 21F-17(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which implements the Dodd-Frank Act’s securities whistleblower provisions. … Read More

Distinguishing Commoditization from Standardization

Paul Lippe, the driving force behind Legal OnRamp, writes a blog for the ABA Journal. The most recent post, available here, is entitled “What Aspects of Legal Services Are Most Likely to Get Standardized?” Here’s the bit that caught my eye: Standardization is not the same as “commoditization,” that great bugaboo of lawyers (I’m not sure what ‘commoditization” is, and … Read More

What Party Information to Include in the Introductory Clause for Entities Formed Outside the U.S.

Here’s what MSCD ¶ 1.48 says regarding information to include in the introductory clause for any party that is an entity: To distinguish a legal-entity party from any other entity bearing the same name, the only information you’d need is its jurisdiction of organization. Consequently, stating the address of a legal-entity party in the introductory clause would serve only to clutter … Read More

I've Installed Highlighter, Google Buttons

[Updated 8:00 p.m. EDT, August 10, 2011: Well, that was a brief experiment: the Highlighter Wordpress plugin was interfering with other features of the site, so I uninstalled it. Seeing that no one used it in the two weeks it was available, I don’t expect howls of disappointment.] As an experiment, I’ve installed Highlighter on this site. Select any text … Read More

Everything You Wanted to Know About “And/Or”

When I’m overcome with the urge to consider use of and/or in legal writing, I now know where to go: to this post on Slaw by Ted Tjaden, national director of knowledge management at the Canadian law firm McMillan. I knew right off that Ted had left no stone unturned in his research, as he starts off by citing my … Read More

Revisiting the Traditional Recital of Consideration

I’d like to revisit an aspect of the traditional recital of consideration. I mentioned in a footnote in my first book, Legal Usage in Drafting Corporate Agreements, that in some jurisdictions a recital of consideration will establish a rebuttable presumption that the contract in question is supported by consideration. An inquiry from a reader served to remind me that MSCD … Read More

Seeking Not-for-Profit to Take Part in Penn Law 2011 Redrafting Project

I soon have to start preparing for the fall semester, when I resume my teaching duties at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. I teach one semester a year, and I teach—guess what?—contract drafting. Since I started teaching at Penn Law, I’ve made a redrafting project part of every semester. The idea is to redraft a contract, or part of … Read More

“At Any Time During My Employment”

Here’s a tidbit from the Bratz doll litigation that I hadn’t noticed previously. In its opinion from last October (go here for a PDF copy), the Ninth Circuit said the following about the phrase “at any time during my employment” (footnote omitted): The district court disagreed, holding at summary judgment that the agreement assigned to Mattel “any doll or doll fashions [Bryant] … Read More