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Citibank’s New Credit Card Agreement: My Review

Via reader Raif Palmer, I learned that Citibank has rolled out a new form of credit card agreement, one that features, according to the cover note to Raif, “A new, clean design with simple language.” Consumer contracts are different from business contracts. Generally I don’t do consumer contracts, but I couldn’t resist having a look at the new card agreement. … Read More

“Joinder”: I Do Not Think It Means What You Think It Means

Behold the following extracts from the outhouse EDGAR, each using the word joinder: … the Company shall cause each such Permitted Subsidiary to become party to the Guaranty by executing a joinder to the Guaranty reasonably satisfactory in form and substance to the Required Holders. On November 11, 2016, the Board authorized this Agreement , contingent upon its execution and … Read More

Why Law Firms Treat Contract Templates As a Starting Point

I’ve heard lawyers from two English “Magic Circle” law firms say, in different words, the same thing: We treat contract templates as a starting point. We want our young lawyers to figure out for themselves how best to adapt the template to the deal. That confuses two parts of the deal process, namely (1) coming up with deal points and (2) … Read More

What Does It Mean to Be a “Truly Knowledgeable Drafter”?

Remember ejusdem generis? It’s the principle of interpretation that holds that if general words follow an enumeration of two or more things, they apply only to persons or things of the same general kind or class. Joe Kimble’s excellent article on ejusdem generis (here) reminded me of the following assertion in Scalia and Garner’s Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal … Read More

“Close of Business”: The Kind of Vagueness You Don’t Want

A reader alerted me to a recent opinion of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales in Lehman Brothers International (Europe) v. ExxonMobil Financial Services BV, [2016] EWHC 2699 (Comm) (here). At issue was the meaning of the phrase close of business, as used in a notices provision in a contract. ExxonMobil submitted a notice to Lehman’s London offices at … Read More

I’m Speaking at the ACC Europe 2017 Annual Meeting

ACC Europe is holding its 2017 annual meeting on 7–9 May in Cascais, Portugal. And I’ll be there, as I have a 1.5-hour “Drafting Clearer Contracts” spot on the programme for 8 May. I have in mind devoting my entire time to what I call “the categories of contract language,” which relates to how you use verb structures in contracts. I’m … Read More

Yet Another Messed-Up Way to Say “May”

Table 4 in MSCD lists a bunch of suboptimal ways of saying may. In the past three years I’ve identified others; see here and here. Today, I’m proud to offer you yet another: is allowed to and its variants! Here are three examples: … and in the absence of any such indication, the Holder shall be allowed to [read may] presume … Read More

Reminder: You Can Subscribe to My Newsletter

The link toward the top right of this page hardly screams for attention, so allow me to mention that you can subscribe to my newsletter by submitting your email address on this page. What is my newsletter, you ask? It’s a once-or-twice-a-month email with a list of blog posts published since the previous newsletter, plus some random musings. You might … Read More

More “Hereunder” Confusion

In my recent article on sources of uncertain meaning in contracts (here) I discuss “contract-reference ambiguity.” That involves fights over the meaning of hereunder, herein, and the like. So it’s appropriate that thanks to this post by Larry P. Schiffer on the Insurance and Reinsurance Disputes Blog (my thanks to @zhadu for the tip), we have word of another dispute … Read More