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Full-Text Articles in Law

Lease Covenants: Exculpation By Implication, R. Harvey Chappell Jr. Dec 1967

Lease Covenants: Exculpation By Implication, R. Harvey Chappell Jr.

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Contracts - Landlord And Tenant - Applicability Of Right Of First Refusal To Judicial Sale - Cities Service Oil Co. V. Estes, 208 Va. 44 (1967), Jon W. Bruce Dec 1967

Contracts - Landlord And Tenant - Applicability Of Right Of First Refusal To Judicial Sale - Cities Service Oil Co. V. Estes, 208 Va. 44 (1967), Jon W. Bruce

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Promissory Estoppel And Oral Employment Contracts Sep 1967

Promissory Estoppel And Oral Employment Contracts

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Contracts - Impossibility - Inaccessibility Of Usual And Customary Route - Transatlantic Financing Corp. V. United States, 363 F.2d 312 (D.C. Cir. 1966), Paul E. Holtzmuller Jun 1967

Contracts - Impossibility - Inaccessibility Of Usual And Customary Route - Transatlantic Financing Corp. V. United States, 363 F.2d 312 (D.C. Cir. 1966), Paul E. Holtzmuller

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Labor Court Idea, R. W. Fleming Jun 1967

The Labor Court Idea, R. W. Fleming

Michigan Law Review

When the War Labor Board first began to exert pressure on companies and unions to adopt grievance arbitration clauses during World War II, there was a considerable hesitance on both sides. Both groups worried that while third party decision making might momentarily improve productive efficiency, it would do so at the price of a long-run loss in institutional integrity and autonomy, and peace at any price held little fascination for either side. Nevertheless, grievance arbitration was accepted and gradually became the normal mechanism for resolving contractual disputes in the United States.


Government Contracts-Adoption Of Uniform Commercial Code As The Applicable Federal Law In An Action For Breach Of Government Contract-United States V. Wegematic Corp., Michigan Law Review May 1967

Government Contracts-Adoption Of Uniform Commercial Code As The Applicable Federal Law In An Action For Breach Of Government Contract-United States V. Wegematic Corp., Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

Appellant contracted to supply the Federal Reserve Board with a "truly revolutionary" electronic digital computing system. After twice requesting postponement of the delivery date, appellant informed the Board that delivery under the terms of the contract would be impracticable because of unforeseen engineering difficulties that would require at least one year and one million dollars to overcome. Appellant asked for cancellation of the contract, but the Board refused and brought a suit for damages. Both parties conceded that federal law governed the action; appellant, however, argued that section 2-615 of the Uniform Commercial Code (Code) should be adopted as the …


Secured Transactions-Insurance-A Security Interest In The "Proceeds" Of Secured Collateral Does Not Include Insurance Proceeds-Universal C.I.T. Corp. V. Prudential Investment Corp., Michigan Law Review May 1967

Secured Transactions-Insurance-A Security Interest In The "Proceeds" Of Secured Collateral Does Not Include Insurance Proceeds-Universal C.I.T. Corp. V. Prudential Investment Corp., Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

In return for a loan, a debtor executed a promissory note to codefendant, Prudential Investment Corporation, and entered into a written agreement to secure this note, designating as collateral a semi-tractor and the proceeds therefrom. Under this type of arrangement, Prudential's security interest would attach automatically to any property received from a sale, exchange, or other disposition of the tractor. Petitioner, Universal C.I.T. Corp., held the conditional sales contract which was executed in financing the purchase of the tractor and was named as loss payee in the insurance contract covering the tractor. When the tractor was totally destroyed, petitioner collected …


Commercial Arbitration In Federal Courts, James F. Nooney Apr 1967

Commercial Arbitration In Federal Courts, James F. Nooney

Vanderbilt Law Review

With increasing frequency attorneys are confronted with disputes arising under commercial contracts which contain arbitration agreements. Before the attorney can advise the client as to his legal position and recommend a course of conduct, he must interpret the effect of the arbitration agreement. Often the first question for the attorney is whether the client (or, in turn, the opposing party) can be forced to arbitrate. The answer depends upon whether agreements to arbitrate future disputes are enforceable under the law applicable to the transaction. Where both parties to the contract are citizens of the same state, the answer is readily …


Changing A Life Beneficiary By Will, Thomas C. Clark Mar 1967

Changing A Life Beneficiary By Will, Thomas C. Clark

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Problems Of Performance Of Sales Contracts Under Japanese And American Law, Katsuro Kanzaki, William C. Jones Mar 1967

Problems Of Performance Of Sales Contracts Under Japanese And American Law, Katsuro Kanzaki, William C. Jones

Washington Law Review

This article will discuss the problem of performance of contracts for the sale of goods (personal property) under American and Japanese law. The discussion of American law will be limited almost entirely to the Uniform Commercial Code. Excluded from this discussion are risk of loss, impossibility and frustration, and products liability; these topics are treated elsewhere in this symposium.


Impossibility And Frustration In Sales Contracts, Kiyoshi Igarashi, Luvern V. Rieke Mar 1967

Impossibility And Frustration In Sales Contracts, Kiyoshi Igarashi, Luvern V. Rieke

Washington Law Review

Legal principles governing sales under Japanese law, a civil rather than common law system, are at some significant points different from the law of the United States. The treatment accorded problems in the two countries involving "impossibility" of performance and "frustration of purpose" present good examples of the differences. Indeed the latter doctrine, "frustration" in the sense of the well-known Coronation cases, may not have a genuine counterpart in the law of Japan. Historically the differentiation between impossibility and frustration has been difficult enough in the common law, as casual reading of the examples used by Judge Williams in Krell …


Formation Of Contracts For The Sale Of Goods, Calvin W. Corman Mar 1967

Formation Of Contracts For The Sale Of Goods, Calvin W. Corman

Washington Law Review

All advanced legal systems, and all bodies concerned with governing international trade transactions, are today struggling with the problems connected with the need to develop acceptable legal rules for contract formation, particularly involving the sale of goods. This article will set forth some of the problems that are inherent in contract formation, and will describe and compare some of the solutions offered (1) by the civil law systems, especially as seen in Japan, Germany, and France; (2) by the common law systems, especially as expressed both in the developing Second Restatement of Contracts and in the Uniform Commercial Code Article …


Risk Of Loss In Japanese Sales Transactions, Hisashi Tanikawa Mar 1967

Risk Of Loss In Japanese Sales Transactions, Hisashi Tanikawa

Washington Law Review

The problems of risk of loss are defined somewhat more broadly in Japan than in the United States. The American lawyer looks at risk of loss as the problem of determining who shall bear the financial burden when some physical object is damaged or destroyed. While making this determination is also a risk of loss problem in Japan, the Japanese lawyer characterizes additional problems as being within the scope of risk of loss. In Japan risk of loss is an inherent problem in all bilateral contracts, not merely contracts involving the transfer of goods. This is because the common law …


Arbitration Clauses And Fraudulent Inducement, Anon Mar 1967

Arbitration Clauses And Fraudulent Inducement, Anon

Washington Law Review

Plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract containing a provision that "any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement... shall be settled by arbitration." A dispute arose and defendant demanded arbitration. Plaintiff brought an action in federal district court to rescind the contract on the ground of fraudulent inducement, moving to stay arbitration. Defendant cross-moved to stay trial pending arbitration. The district court granted defendant's motion and denied plaintiff's. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. Held: Unless there is an allegation that the arbitration provision itself was fraudulently induced, an issue of fraudulent inducement of …


Formation Of Contracts For The Sale Of Goods, Calvin W. Corman Mar 1967

Formation Of Contracts For The Sale Of Goods, Calvin W. Corman

Washington Law Review

All advanced legal systems, and all bodies concerned with governing international trade transactions, are today struggling with the problems connected with the need to develop acceptable legal rules for contract formation, particularly involving the sale of goods. This article will set forth some of the problems that are inherent in contract formation, and will describe and compare some of the solutions offered (1) by the civil law systems, especially as seen in Japan, Germany, and France; (2) by the common law systems, especially as expressed both in the developing Second Restatement of Contracts and in the Uniform Commercial Code Article …


Impossibility And Frustration In Sales Contracts, Kiyoshi Igarashi, Luvern V. Rieke Mar 1967

Impossibility And Frustration In Sales Contracts, Kiyoshi Igarashi, Luvern V. Rieke

Washington Law Review

Legal principles governing sales under Japanese law, a civil rather than common law system, are at some significant points different from the law of the United States. The treatment accorded problems in the two countries involving "impossibility" of performance and "frustration of purpose" present good examples of the differences. Indeed the latter doctrine, "frustration" in the sense of the well-known Coronation cases, may not have a genuine counterpart in the law of Japan. Historically the differentiation between impossibility and frustration has been difficult enough in the common law, as casual reading of the examples used by Judge Williams in Krell …


Risk Of Loss In Japanese Sales Transactions, Hisashi Tanikawa Mar 1967

Risk Of Loss In Japanese Sales Transactions, Hisashi Tanikawa

Washington Law Review

The problems of risk of loss are defined somewhat more broadly in Japan than in the United States. The American lawyer looks at risk of loss as the problem of determining who shall bear the financial burden when some physical object is damaged or destroyed. While making this determination is also a risk of loss problem in Japan, the Japanese lawyer characterizes additional problems as being within the scope of risk of loss. In Japan risk of loss is an inherent problem in all bilateral contracts, not merely contracts involving the transfer of goods. This is because the common law …


Communist China's Foreign Trade Organization, Gene T. Hsiao Mar 1967

Communist China's Foreign Trade Organization, Gene T. Hsiao

Vanderbilt Law Review

Although as of October 1966 Communist China has been diplomatically recognized by only fifty countries' and thus still remains outside the world legal community, it has trade relations with more than 120 countries and regions. The annual volume of Peking's foreign trade has been estimated at 2.96 billion dollars in 1963 and 4.5 billion dollars in 1966. The latest Western reports from Peking indicate that foreign buyers and sellers see in "China's 700 million people a market with dazzling prospects and a potential source "of supply of goods they can market profitably in their countries." The official organ of the …


Lottery Approach To Promotional Schemes, Anon Mar 1967

Lottery Approach To Promotional Schemes, Anon

Washington Law Review

Plaintiff, assignee of a conditional sales contract for the purchase of a home fire alarm system, sued defendant-purchaser upon default. The assignor-seller had obtained the contract using a referral sales scheme as an inducement, and plaintiff knew of the scheme at the time of assignment. The scheme included a Representative's Commission Agreement in which seller promised to pay purchaser one hundred dollars for each sale made to purchaser's sixty referrals. In addition, seller promised five Bonus Presentation Guarantees of 200 dollars, each payable when seller had contacted fifteen of purchaser's referrals. Seller represented that the referral plan would pay for …


Problems Of Performance Of Sales Contracts Under Japanese And American Law, Katsuro Kanzaki, William C. Jones Mar 1967

Problems Of Performance Of Sales Contracts Under Japanese And American Law, Katsuro Kanzaki, William C. Jones

Washington Law Review

This article will discuss the problem of performance of contracts for the sale of goods (personal property) under American and Japanese law. The discussion of American law will be limited almost entirely to the Uniform Commercial Code. Excluded from this discussion are risk of loss, impossibility and frustration, and products liability; these topics are treated elsewhere in this symposium.


Arbitration Clauses And Fraudulent Inducement, Anon Mar 1967

Arbitration Clauses And Fraudulent Inducement, Anon

Washington Law Review

Plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract containing a provision that "any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement... shall be settled by arbitration." A dispute arose and defendant demanded arbitration. Plaintiff brought an action in federal district court to rescind the contract on the ground of fraudulent inducement, moving to stay arbitration. Defendant cross-moved to stay trial pending arbitration. The district court granted defendant's motion and denied plaintiff's. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. Held: Unless there is an allegation that the arbitration provision itself was fraudulently induced, an issue of fraudulent inducement of …


Lottery Approach To Promotional Schemes, Anon Mar 1967

Lottery Approach To Promotional Schemes, Anon

Washington Law Review

Plaintiff, assignee of a conditional sales contract for the purchase of a home fire alarm system, sued defendant-purchaser upon default. The assignor-seller had obtained the contract using a referral sales scheme as an inducement, and plaintiff knew of the scheme at the time of assignment. The scheme included a Representative's Commission Agreement in which seller promised to pay purchaser one hundred dollars for each sale made to purchaser's sixty referrals. In addition, seller promised five Bonus Presentation Guarantees of 200 dollars, each payable when seller had contacted fifteen of purchaser's referrals. Seller represented that the referral plan would pay for …


Reformation And The Parol Evidence Rule, George E. Palmer Mar 1967

Reformation And The Parol Evidence Rule, George E. Palmer

Michigan Law Review

The parol evidence rule of itself is never an obstacle to reformation, provided there is satisfactory evidence of a mistake in integration. If the parties intend to express the terms of a transaction in a writing, which is then to be looked to as the sole repository of those terms, the longstanding tradition of the law courts, described as the parol evidence rule, has been that the writing is controlling. If through mistake the writing failed to express correctly what the parties meant to express, the law courts still regarded the written word as decisive, but it has been recognized …


Building Contractor's Liability After Completion And Acceptance, James Jay Brown Jan 1967

Building Contractor's Liability After Completion And Acceptance, James Jay Brown

Cleveland State Law Review

Schipper v. Levitt & Sons, Inc., held that a tract home-builder must defend his actions against the prima facie case established by an injured third party. The importance of this case lies in the application of a tort doctrine, previously applied exclusively to negligent acts by chattel manufacturers, to real property construction. This extension is shattering the ancient property concepts so much the bedrock of our Common Law. We will review that foundation and the old rules of non-liability as they concern the landowner, contractor, and third party, in order to grasp the significance of this new change in jurisprudential …


Recent Cases Jan 1967

Recent Cases

University of Richmond Law Review

This is a summary of the case law from 1967.


The Pennsylvania Goods And Services Installment Sales Act, Robert B. White Jr. Jan 1967

The Pennsylvania Goods And Services Installment Sales Act, Robert B. White Jr.

Villanova Law Review

No abstract provided.


Rent Abatement Legislation: An Answer To Landlords, Richard G. Greiner Jan 1967

Rent Abatement Legislation: An Answer To Landlords, Richard G. Greiner

Villanova Law Review

No abstract provided.


Contracts - Parol Evidence, David J. Kozma Jan 1967

Contracts - Parol Evidence, David J. Kozma

Duquesne Law Review

Parol evidence rule does not bar testimony concerning procurement of bank financing as an oral condition precedent to the formation of a contract for home improvements that did not mention financing, since the oral agreement did not contradict the main body of the written contract, despite the inclusion of an "integration clause."

Luther Williams, Jr., Inc. v. Johnson, 229 A.2d 163 (D.C. Ct. App. 1967).


Implied Warranty - Privity Of Contract, David J. Kozma Jan 1967

Implied Warranty - Privity Of Contract, David J. Kozma

Duquesne Law Review

Absence of privity of contract between an automobile manufacturer and the ultimate purchaser and execution of a written warranty agreement between manufacturer and retailer disclaiming any implied warranty of fitness does not preclude recovery of damages by the ultimate purchaser from the manufacturer for breach of implied warranty of fitness.

Manheim v. Ford Motor Co., 201 So. 2d 440 (Fla. 1967).


The Anomalous Position Of The Insurance Agent - An Invitation To Schizophrenia, Robert M. Morrison Jan 1967

The Anomalous Position Of The Insurance Agent - An Invitation To Schizophrenia, Robert M. Morrison

Villanova Law Review

No abstract provided.