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The Construction of Contracts Interpretation, Implication and Rectification
By
Gerard McMeel
Description
- Provides practical insight on the pitfalls related to negotiating and drafting commercial contracts
- Equips readers with a comprehensive account of doctrinal and practical matters relating to written contracts
- Offers guidance on the current approach and trends of courts and tribunals
- Contains full references to all relevant case law and journal articles which can be used for detailed argument
- Tackles problem issues relating to specific types of clauses including warranties and indemnities, exception clauses, force majeure, express termination, retention of title, variation, waiver and choice of law
- Contracts from a variety of commercial contexts are covered such as international trade, carriage of goods, supply of goods and services, landlord and tenant and financial services
- Contains full references to all relevant case law and journal articles which can be used for detailed argument
- Provides practical insight on the pitfalls related to negotiating and drafting commercial contracts
This exciting new practitioner-orientated text provides a clear and comprehensive account of the legal principles and doctrines which come into play whenever the parties disagree about the meaning and effect of the contractual words. Most commercial transactions, from the supply of goods of services to the sale of a business, are reduced to writing. In most cases this entails that the deal is recorded in clear and certain terms for the parties to perform. Nevertheless written contracts are abundant with disputes about the meaning and effect of particular words and phrases.
Although the common law principles and techniques of construction are of long ancestry, they have recently come to greater prominence as judges have self-consciously sought to modernise the approach to the interpretation of contractual instruments. This work provides a new and refreshed account of the principles involved, focusing on the practitioners needs, tackling modernisation head on and equipping readers with the necessary means to avoid pitfalls in contractual provisions.
The coverage extends to related rules and doctrines, including rectification and implication of terms, and consideration of the status of the controversial parol evidence rule. The book also considers the nature of effect of particular species of contractual provision, including warranties and indemnities, exemption clauses, force majeure clauses and entire agreement clauses.
Readership: Practitioners in the fields of commercial, corporate, banking, financial services; property and other civil law work and litigators involved in contractual disputes.
Authors, editors, and contributors
Gerard McMeel, Professor of Law, University of Bristol
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