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Separation Agreement, Anyone?

Because my notion of a library of automated commercial contracts remains a distant prospect, what I have to offer in the way of contracts to copy is exceedingly limited. There is, of course, my automated confidentiality agreement. (See this post and this article on LinkedIn.) It remains way better than anything else out there. But I also have a separation … Read More

Yet More Syntactic Ambiguity

Have we had enough of syntactic ambiguity yet? Aside from my many posts about syntactic ambiguity over the years, recent weeks have brought us the Maine serial-comma case (here) and the Georgia campus-carry bill (here). Now, thanks to this post on ContractsProf Blog I learned about BL Partners Group, L.P. v. Interbroad, LLC, No. 465 EDA 2016, 2017 WL 2591473 … Read More

Diagrams? Sure, But First Fix the Words

ContractsProf Blog has this post by Brian N. Larson about a study by Stefania Passera and others that apparently shows that diagrams made a contract easier to understand. The study’s findings don’t come as a surprise. Plenty of contracts describe mechanisms with alternative outcomes, with those outcomes then prompting further outcomes. Tag-along and drag-along rights come to mind. Also preferred-stock antidilution … Read More

I Stay On-Message on LinkedIn

LinkedIn is my preferred forum for stuff that you, dear reader, have heard many times on this blog. In that spirit, today I posted on LinkedIn an article entitled What Level of Dysfunction in Your Contracts Is Acceptable? My notion is that if I keep hammering away, people will get my point. Or get fed up.

Do Contracts Matter in Oman?

In this LinkedIn article I asked, Do your contracts matter? A logical follow-up to that would be to ask people in different countries whether their contracts matter. So that’s what I did for this post. More specifically, I got in touch with Riyadh Al-Balushi, a lawyer working for the government of Oman, although he’s currently on sabbatical, pursuing a PhD. … Read More

“Nothing in this Agreement Prevents X from [Doing Something]”

[Update: This 30 July 2017 post rendered this post redundant.] In this 2015 post I consider Nothing in this agreement gives X the right to [do something]. Now let’s consider Nothing in this agreement prevents X from [doing something]. We have to ask the age-old question: what category of contract language is this? Is it language of discretion? In other … Read More

“Read Before Signing”

Yesterday @WestMichiganLaw sent my way on Twitter the release by journalist Ben Jacobs in favor of the Republican who assaulted him. (PDF here.) What caught my eye was the notation “CAUTION: READ BEFORE SIGNING!” above the signature block (highlighting added in this image and the others in this post): (Bonus: the half-witted successors-and-assigns language. You’re welcome.) The read this notation got … Read More

Does this Stuff Matter?

You might have noticed that with the fourth edition of MSCD in production, I’ve been pondering where things stand and what comes next. As part of that I’ve made a point of having slightly awkward conversations with some in-house lawyers who are friends of MSCD. I look at their templates, point out the inevitable shortcomings, then see what they have … Read More

Where Are the Contract-Drafting Specialists?

Here’s something I said in this article on LinkedIn: And more generally, being expert in your company’s transactions doesn’t make you an expert in contract language, any more than knowing how to drive a car makes you an expert mechanic. Contract drafting is a specialized kind of writing: leave it to specialists. By “specialist,” I mean someone who is expert in … Read More

Tech Will Not Build You a Perfect Contract Template

This post on Artificial Lawyer by Richard Tromans (@ArtificialLawya) notes that more and more technology is being directed at the contract process. In fact, there’s so much of it that I’ve stopped trying to keep track. The article focuses on a product called Avvoka. I’m not familiar with it, and I certainly haven’t tried it. My purpose is, as usual, … Read More