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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Law
Title 14 New York Choice Of Law Rule For Contractual Disputes: Avoiding The Unreasonable Results , Barry W. Rashkover
Title 14 New York Choice Of Law Rule For Contractual Disputes: Avoiding The Unreasonable Results , Barry W. Rashkover
Cornell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Diligentia Quam In Suis: A Standard Of Contractual Liability From Ancient Roman To Modern Soviet Law, Herbert Hausmaninger
Diligentia Quam In Suis: A Standard Of Contractual Liability From Ancient Roman To Modern Soviet Law, Herbert Hausmaninger
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Notes On The Reliance Interest, Robert Birmingham
Notes On The Reliance Interest, Robert Birmingham
Washington Law Review
The topic is Contract Damages. The interests are defined by how we protect them. Imagine a breaching promisor. We protect the reliance interest of the promisee by requiring the promisor to put her in a position as good as she would have been in had the parties not contracted. The other interests are the restitution interest, which we protect by requiring the promisor to give back what the promisee has given him; and the expectation interest, which we protect by requiring the promisor to put the promisee in a position as good as she would have been in had he …
Contract Compensation In Nonmarket Transactions, Joseph P. Tomain
Contract Compensation In Nonmarket Transactions, Joseph P. Tomain
Faculty Articles and Other Publications
Professor Tomain assails the myths holding that contract law is either complete and unitary or hopelessly indeterminate. He contends that a distinction must be made between market situations, which require a more formal analysis, and nonmarket transactions to which a more particularized analysis should be applied. Making the market/nonmarket distinction permits flexibility of methodology and considerations of economics, politics, and morals as appropriate, without forcing the conclusion that contracts analysis is totally without structure. Professor Tomain advocates application of reflective doctrinal analysis which tests the sufficiency of a rule of law and reforms the rule if it is not supported …
Third-Party Beneficiary Contracts, Frederick Mcgaha
Third-Party Beneficiary Contracts, Frederick Mcgaha
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Parol Evidence Rule And Implied Terms: The Sound Of Silence, Helen Hadjiyannakis
The Parol Evidence Rule And Implied Terms: The Sound Of Silence, Helen Hadjiyannakis
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Personal Jurisdiction Over Nonresident Debtors: When May Creditors Sue At Home?, Gene R. Shreve
Personal Jurisdiction Over Nonresident Debtors: When May Creditors Sue At Home?, Gene R. Shreve
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Foreseeability In Contract And Tort: The Problems Of Responsibility And Remoteness, Banks Mcdowell
Foreseeability In Contract And Tort: The Problems Of Responsibility And Remoteness, Banks Mcdowell
Case Western Reserve Law Review
No abstract provided.
Introduction, Saul Litvinoff
Detrimental Reliance, Jon C. Adcock
A Riddle Of Solidarity: The Release Of One Solidary Obligor, Mark C. Dodart
A Riddle Of Solidarity: The Release Of One Solidary Obligor, Mark C. Dodart
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
Contract Dissolution, James J. Hautot
Offer And Acceptance, Michael W. Mengis
Assumption Of Obligations: Third Party No More, John Tsai
Assumption Of Obligations: Third Party No More, John Tsai
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.