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Sun’s Revised Contributor Agreement

A reader brought to my attention a recent post on the blog of Mike Dillon, general counsel of Sun Microsystems. It describes how Mike had Sun’s form of contributor agreement revised after someone complained that it was too wordy and complicated. As Mike explains, contributor agreements are used by most open-source companies and communities to specify the terms for contributions … Read More

The Benefits of Sloppy Drafting?

In his Market Movers blog, journalist Mark Salmon discusses whether there are any benefits to sloppy contract drafting. Mark quotes another blogger to the effect that sloppy drafting can represent an attempt to bury an issue in impenetrable verbiage. I added a brief comment to Mark’s post, but I’m not inclined to attempt a definitive treatment—a simpler explanation for sloppy … Read More

An Interview with Your Favorite Contract-Drafting “Guru”

The December 14, 2007, issue of the Canadian periodical The Lawyers Weekly contains an article about yours truly. Click here for a pdf copy (note that the first page is just the photo; the interview itself is on the second page). And click here for the online version of the article.

Am I Simply Expressing My “Personal Opinions”?

I’m back from another foray to Toronto, for a seminar at Osgoode Professional Development and another at a law firm. (Greetings, Toronto newcomers to this blog!) Although there’s always room for improvement, both seminars went well. But I’ve come to expect that occasionally amid the favorable evaluations will be one by a seriously unhappy participant. And that was the case … Read More

A Report on the Penn Law 2007 Contract-Redrafting Project

Each semester that I teach, I inflict a series of drafting assignments on students in my Penn Law contract drafting class. This semester, the final assignment—the grand climax!—consisted of redrafting the first five pages of a master services agreement submitted to me by a major financial-services company in response to this invitation I posted on this blog. The company—let’s call … Read More

“Moral Turpitude”—An AdamsDrafting Complete-the-Blog-Post Competition!

I’ve had in the can for a few weeks a partly completed blog post on the subject of the phrase moral turpitude. This phrase features in various kinds of agreements providing for an ongoing relationship, but I associate it with employment agreements in particular. The post remains unfinished because although I’ve identified the problem with the phrase, I’d like some … Read More

A Law Firm that Forbids Use of “Shall”?

In my recent article advocating disciplined use of shall I mention that I haven’t seen any evidence of a flight from shall. At any given time individual lawyers, or groups of lawyers, or conceivably entire organizations, might eschew shall. But I have a hard time imagining that it could be commonplace for any group of lawyers—a notoriously free-spirited bunch—to proscribe … Read More

Mass Nouns—Another Source of “The Part Versus the Whole” Ambiguity

“The part versus the whole” is the term I use to refer to ambiguity regarding whether a single member of a group of two or more is being referred to, or the entire group. Along with materiality, it’s the most complex topic I’ve written about. That helps explain how the literature on drafting has so thoroughly botched this subject. It’s … Read More

U.S. “Contract Drafting—Language & Layout” Seminars for Feb.–June 2008

On December 5 I do my final West Legalworks seminar of 2007, in Miami. But in case you thought that was it, here are—drum roll, please—dates for additional U.S. “Contract Drafting—Language and Layout” seminars for the first half of 2008: February 13, Phoenix, AZ February 28, Houston, TX March 6, Orlando, FL March 12, Richmond, VA April 3, Philadelphia, PA … Read More

Quinn and Adams Article in the ACC Docket

The December 2007 issue of the ACC Docket, the magazine of the Association of Corporate Counsel, contains the article “Transitioning Your Contract Process from the Artistic to the Industrial,” by Brian Quinn and yours truly. It provides an overview of issues that companies face in controlling the contract process and discusses some useful tools that have become available. I think … Read More