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Fundamental policies of contract drafting and its values, Summaries of Contract Law

talks about the basic values and the policies one needs to keep in mind when drafting a legal contract.

Typology: Summaries

2022/2023

Uploaded on 02/13/2024

Zaki98Khan94
Zaki98Khan94 🇮🇳

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Download Fundamental policies of contract drafting and its values and more Summaries Contract Law in PDF only on Docsity! Fundamental Policies and Values of Contract Law Introduction While a course on contract drafting may seem dry and technical, there are a number of strongly held ideological values underlying contract law and its rules are motivated by conscious and deliberate public policy. Understanding these policy themes can help a practitioner appreciate the goals and assumptions underlying the legal rules involved in drafting contracts. Freedom of Contract The power to enter contracts and to formulate the terms of contractual relationships can be regarded as an integral part of personal liberty. For instance, this respect for the exercise of personal liberty is the policy reason underlying the rule in contracts that one may not be bound to a contract absent that person’s assent. In the United States, the power of contracting is understood to be one of the innate rights originating in the people and guaranteed by the Constitution. Liberty of contract also enforces individual rights to hold and deal with property. Like other liberties, freedom of contract is limited by corresponding rights held by other persons and by the state’s legitimate interest in appropriate regulation. Such regulation may be directed, for example, at protecting weaker parties from the free exercise of overwhelming contractual power by stronger dominant parties. The ideological basis of contract freedom is reinforced by economic principles, as well. For example, economic intercourse is most efficient when its participants desire it and are free to bargain with each other to reach mutually desirable terms. Morality of Promise There is also a longstanding moral dimension of contract in law: that there is an ethical as well as legal obligation to keep one’s promises. Thus, contracts should be honored not only because reliability is necessary to foster economic interaction, but simply because it is morally wrong to break them. Although it often seems that the role that this basic moral value plays in contract law is subtle, society and courts are not indifferent to the ethical implications of dishonoring contracts—especially in the case of deliberate breaches that are motivated by bad faith.
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