Blog

Using Italics for Defined Terms?

A rogue comment by noted anarchist A. Wright Burke, M. Phil., in this post got commenters contemplating alternatives to using initial capitals to designate defined terms. In the process, Mark Anderson posted the following comment: A German: English legal translator recently asked a similar question on IP Draughts. As German nouns are capitalised, they though this was not a useful … Read More

A Lesson for Contract Drafters from the A-Rod Dispute

Via prolific tipster Steven Sholk, I learned of this post, by Nathaniel Grow, on Sports Law Blog about baseball player Alex Rodriguez’s legal maneuvering in response to his being suspended by Major League Baseball for having taken performance-enhancing drugs. Here’s the part that caught my eye (hyperlinks omitted): However, as the arbitration decision reveals, Rodriguez’s suspension was not based on … Read More

You Don’t Want to Make This Kind of Mistake in a Contract Formula

If there’s anything worse than drafting confusing contract language, it’s making a mistake that results in a provision conveying a meaning that puts your client in a deep, expensive hole. That came to mind last week, while I was in Montreal for a public “Drafting Clearer Contracts” seminar. I had the opportunity to get together with Kevin Kyte, a partner at … Read More

Economic Crisis as Force Majeure? (Plus a Note on Italics and Hyphens)

I noted with interest this article in Corporate Counsel by Kevin Jacobs and Benjamin Sweet, of the law firm Baker Botts. It’s entitled “‘Force Majeure’ in the Wake of the Financial Crisis.” I recommend that you read the article, but here’s the gist of it: Thus far, courts continue to resist applying this contractual provision to even the most severe economic … Read More

Add a Mediation Provision to a Commercial Contract? Meh.

A client recently suggested that I add a mediation provision to a master services agreement that I’ve been preparing for them. While pondering that idea, I happened upon this item in a newsletter by the law firm Smith, Gambrell & Russell, LLP. (Why no author specified?) It captures why I ultimately recommended that we not include a mediation provision. Here’s the … Read More

The President of Alabama State University Signs an Awkwardly Worded Contract

Via @BrianStewartOH I learned of this article in the Washington Post about a contract between Alabama State University and its new president. The contract contains the following provision: For so long as Dr. Boyd is President and a single person, she shall not be allowed to cohabitate in the President’s residence with any person with whom she has a romantic relation. … Read More

“The Date Notified”

Here’s an odd little usage: the date notified. I first saw it in section 1.1.3.2 of the FIDIC contract I discussed in this post (emphasis added): “Commencement Date” means the date notified under Sub-Clause 8.1. Here are some other examples from that den of iniquity, the SEC’s EDGAR system: Each Lender shall make available to the applicable Issuing Bank an … Read More

Upcoming Seminars: Montreal, Australia

The holidays are over, and I’ll soon be heading out on the road. Here are the public “Drafting Clearer Contracts” seminars scheduled for the next few weeks: January 17, Montreal, QC February 17, Melbourne, Australia February 18, Canberra, Australia February 21, Sydney, Australia I’ll be in Kuala Lumpur on February 24–25 for a two-day seminar, and on March 27 I’ll be … Read More