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Books > Law > Laws of other jurisdictions & general law > Private, property, family law > Contract law

Promises and Contract Law - Comparative Perspectives (Paperback): Martin Hogg Promises and Contract Law - Comparative Perspectives (Paperback)
Martin Hogg
R1,463 Discovery Miles 14 630 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Promises and Contract Law is the first modern work to explore the significance of promise to contract law from a comparative legal perspective. Part I explores the component elements of promise, its role in Greek thought and Roman law, the importance of the moral duty to keep promises and the development of promissory ideas in medieval legal scholarship. Part II considers the modern contract law of a number of legal systems from a promissory perspective. The focus is on the law of England, Germany and three mixed legal systems (Scotland, South Africa and Louisiana), though other legal systems are also mentioned. Major topics subjected to a promissory analysis include formation of contract, third party rights, contractual remedies and the renunciation of contractual rights. Part III analyses the future role which promise might play in contract law, especially within a harmonised European contract law.

Principles of Contract Law, Third Edition 2013 - Paperback (Paperback): Kevin S Marshall, Juanda Lowder Daniel Principles of Contract Law, Third Edition 2013 - Paperback (Paperback)
Kevin S Marshall, Juanda Lowder Daniel
R2,866 Discovery Miles 28 660 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The law of contracts permeates most, if not all, other subjects of legal education. The third edition of Principles of Contract Law surveys the fundamental legal principles underlying the law of contracts, addressing such customary topics as contract formation, defenses and other doctrines of avoidance, breach and performance, remedies, as well as such other collateral but related topics involving third-party beneficiaries, assignments and delegations. The text addresses the traditional common law principles governing contracts, and yet is accompanied by a steadied discussion of relevant commercial law principles pertaining to the sale of goods under Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code. When able to do so, the authors remained loyal to their commitment to utilize time-honored, classic common law cases in their presentment of the subject matter. While this textbook adopts a classical approach to the study of contracts, it is also provides a relevant and robust experience for the aspiring law student. About the Authors: Kevin S. Marshall is Professor of Law at the University of La Verne College of Law, Ontario California where he teaches Contracts, Antitrust, Corporate Finance and Governance and Law & Economics. Professor Marshall also serves as Lecturer at the University of La Verne College of Business and Public Administration where he teaches graduate courses in finance, economics and quantitative methods. Professor Marshall joined the La Verne Law faculty in 2004, after having practiced law for approximately twenty years in Dallas, Texas. Professor Marshall received his J.D. from Emory University School of Law and his M.P.A. and his PH.D. in Political Economy from the University of Texas. Professor Marshall also serves as both a testifying and consulting economic expert with respect to economic damages in Robinson-Patman, antitrust, breach of contract, class-action fairness hearings, wrongful termination, employment discrimination, personal injury, and wrongful death cases. Professor Marshall has published and presented numerous books and articles involving the interdisciplinary workings of law and economics. Juanda Lowder Daniel currently serves as University Counsel to California State University. Professor Daniel formerly taught at the University of La Verne College of Law at the rank of Full Professor teaching Contracts, Contract Drafting and Sales. Professor Daniel received her J.D. from Emory University School of Law. Professor Daniel joined the La Verne Law faculty in 2001, bringing with her a wealth of practice experience and moot court familiarity. Professor Daniel also spent four years as deputy city attorney for the City of Riverside, California, and several years in private practice. She is a member of the state bars of California, Michigan, Illinois, Washington, and Minnesota and is admitted to the United States District Court, Central District of California. Professor Daniel has published and presented numerous articles on various aspects of the law of Contracts and Sales.

Contract Law in Australia (Paperback): Eugene Clark, Lynden Griggs, George Cho, Arthur Hoyle Contract Law in Australia (Paperback)
Eugene Clark, Lynden Griggs, George Cho, Arthur Hoyle
R3,563 Discovery Miles 35 630 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Derived from the renowned multi-volume International Encyclopaedia of Laws, this practical analysis of the law of contracts in Australia covers every aspect of the subject - definition and classification of contracts, contractual liability, relation to the law of property, good faith, burden of proof, defects, penalty clauses, arbitration clauses, remedies in case of non-performance, damages, power of attorney, and much more. Lawyers who handle transnational contracts will appreciate the explanation of fundamental differences in terminology, application, and procedure from one legal system to another, as well as the international aspects of contract law. Throughout the book, the treatment emphasizes drafting considerations.

Unjust Enrichment in South African Law - Rethinking Enrichment by Transfer (Hardcover, New): Helen Scott Unjust Enrichment in South African Law - Rethinking Enrichment by Transfer (Hardcover, New)
Helen Scott
R3,855 Discovery Miles 38 550 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Conventional thinking teaches that the absence of liability - in particular contractual invalidity - is itself the reason for the restitution of transfers in the South African law of unjustified enrichment. However, this book argues that while the absence of a relationship of indebtedness is a necessary condition for restitution in such cases, it is not a sufficient condition. The book takes as its focus those instances in which the invalidity thesis is strongest, namely, those traditionally classified as instances of the condictio indebiti, the claim to recover undue transfers. It seeks to demonstrate that in all such instances it is necessary for the plaintiff to show not only the absence of his liability to transfer but also a specific reason for restitution, such as mistake, compulsion or incapacity. Furthermore, this book explores the reasons for the rise of unjust factors in South African law, attributing this development in part to the influence of the Roman-Dutch restitutio in integrum, an extraordinary, equitable remedy that has historically operated independently of the established enrichment remedies of the civilian tradition, and which even now remains imperfectly integrated into the substantive law of enrichment. Finally, the book seeks to defend in principled terms the mixed approach to enrichment by transfer (an approach based both on unjust factors and on the absence of a legal ground) which appears to characterise modern South African law. It advocates the rationalisation of the causes of action comprised within the condictio indebiti, many of which are subject to additional historically-determined requirements, in light of this mixed analysis.

Exploring Private Law (Paperback): Elise Bant, Matthew Harding Exploring Private Law (Paperback)
Elise Bant, Matthew Harding
R1,474 Discovery Miles 14 740 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Exploring Private Law presents a collection of essays, by leading scholars from across the world, on private law doctrines, remedies, and methods. The overarching purpose of the collection, inspired by recent debate, is to celebrate and illustrate the contribution that both top-down' and bottom-up' methods of reasoning make to the development of private law. With that purpose in mind, the contributors to the collection explore a range of topics of current interest: judicial approaches to top-down' and bottom-up' methods; teaching trusts law; the protection of privacy in private law; the development of the law of unjust enrichment; the private law consequences of theft; equity's jurisdiction to relieve against forfeiture; the nature of fiduciary relationships and obligations; the duties of trustees; compensation and disgorgement remedies; partial rescission; the role of unconscionability in proprietary estoppel; and the nature of registered title to land.

CONTRATOS ADMINISTRATIVOS. CONTRATOS PUBLICOS, CONTRATOS DEL ESTADO. Segunda edicion corregida y aumentada (Spanish, Paperback,... CONTRATOS ADMINISTRATIVOS. CONTRATOS PUBLICOS, CONTRATOS DEL ESTADO. Segunda edicion corregida y aumentada (Spanish, Paperback, 2nd ed.)
Allan R. Brewer-Carias
R1,714 R1,446 Discovery Miles 14 460 Save R268 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

CONTRATOS ADMINISTRATIVOS, CONTRATOS PUBLICOS, CONTRATOS DEL ESTADO Por Allan R. Brewer-Carias Este libro recoge, en un solo volumen presentado con una sistematizacion impecable, toda la extensa obra del profesor Allan R. Brewer-Carias sobre el tema de los Contratos Administrativos, Contratos Publico, Contratos del Estado, escrita y publicada durante los ultimos cincuenta anos sobre uno de los temas que pueden considerarse como neuralgicos del derecho administrativo, y cuyo desarrollo ha contribuido a la reafirmacion de la propia autonomia de la disciplina. Se trata del tema de los "contratos administrativos" o mas general, de los contratos publicos, que estan sometidos a un regimen preponderante de derecho publico (sin dejar de nutrirse de los principios aplicables a los contratos en general), conforme al cual, entre otros aspectos, deben contener clausulas de caracter obligatorio, por ejemplo, en materia de inmunidad de jurisdiccion, en materia ambiental, o de orden temporal en el caso de concesiones administrativas; ademas, estan sujetos a regulaciones especificas sobre procedimientos especiales para la seleccion de contratistas, como son la licitacion y el concurso; sobre la prevision de poderes que se consideran exorbitantes del derecho comun, a las Administraciones Publicas contratantes para dirigir y controlar la ejecucion de los contratos publicos, para modificar el alcance de las obligaciones contractuales del co-contratante, para sancionar sus incumplimientos, e incluso, para rescindir unilateralmente el contrato por incumplimientos del co-contratante o por razones de interes general, lo que en materia de concesiones, equivale al rescate anticipado de las mismas. Dicho regimen de derecho publico ha conducido, por ejemplo al desarrollo del principio del equilibrio economico del contrato, que impone a la Administracion contratante el deber de preservarlo y restablecerlo debiendo compensar al co-contratante, cuando se rompe, por ejemplo, en casos de modificaciones al contrato, o de rescision unilateral por razones de interes general o por las afectaciones al contrato derivadas de un "hecho del principe;" principios todos cuyo origen remoto esta en el derecho frances que tanto influyo en esta materia en el desarrollo del derecho administrativo espanol e iberoamericano. La obra del profesor Brewer-Carias, aun cuando teniendo como punto de referencia el derecho venezolano, abarca el estudio de todos esos principios relativos a la contratacion publica, los cuales son tratados en los cuatro Libros que componen el la obra: El primero sobre "La teoria de los contratos administrativos" que recoge un trabajo suyo de 1964, referido a los principios generales sobre la contratacion administrativa; el segundo, sobre los "contratos administrativos,"que recoge un libro de 1992, donde estudia, en particular, el tema del sentido actual de la clasica distincion entre los "contratos administrativos" y los llamados "contratos de derecho privado de la Administracion; ademas de las caracteristicas fundamentales de los mismos, el regimen de su formacion y efectos, la responsabilidad contractual y el contencioso administrativo de los contratos de la Administracion. El tercero, referido a varios estudios contemporaneos sobre el tema mas general de los contratos publicos, la revivencia de la nocion de "contrato administrativo," y el regimen especifico de las concesiones administrativas. Y el cuarto, referido al estudio especifico de los temas de la inmunidad relativa de jurisdiccion del Estado en los contratos publicos, del tema del arbitraje como medio de solucion de controversias en la contratacion publica, y los casos de consentimiento del Estado en materia de arbitraje internacional ante el Centro Internacional de Arreglo de Diferencias relativas a Inversiones (CIADI).

Law and Language - Current Legal Issues Volume 15 (Hardcover): Michael Freeman, Fiona Smith Law and Language - Current Legal Issues Volume 15 (Hardcover)
Michael Freeman, Fiona Smith
R4,579 Discovery Miles 45 790 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Current Legal Issues, like its sister volume Current Legal Problems (now available in journal format), is based upon an annual colloquium held at University College London. Each year leading scholars from around the world gather to discuss the relationship between law and another discipline of thought. Each colloquium examines how the external discipline is conceived in legal thought and argument, how the law is pictured in that discipline, and analyses points of controversy in the use, and abuse, of extra-legal arguments within legal theory and practice. Law and Language, the fifteenth volume in the Current Legal Issues series, offers an insight into the scholarship examining the relationship between language and the law. The issues examined in this book range from problems of interpretation and beyond this to the difficulties of legal translation, and further to non-verbal expression in a chapter tracing the use of sign language at the Old Bailey; it examines the role of language and the law in a variety of literary works, including Hamlet; and considers the interrelation between language and the law in a variety of contexts, including criminal law, contract law, family law, human rights law, and EU law.

A Digest of Hindu Law, on Contracts and Successions - With a Commentary by Jagannatha Tercapanchanana (Paperback): Jagannatha... A Digest of Hindu Law, on Contracts and Successions - With a Commentary by Jagannatha Tercapanchanana (Paperback)
Jagannatha Tercapanchanana; Translated by Henry Thomas Colebrooke
R2,063 Discovery Miles 20 630 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

An honorary professor of Sanskrit and Hindu law at Fort William College in Calcutta, and a key figure in the foundation of the Royal Asiatic Society, Henry Thomas Colebrooke (1765-1837) became Britain's foremost orientalist during the early nineteenth century. Taking up the reins of Sanskrit scholarship following the death of Sir William Jones (1746-94), Colebrooke made several substantial contributions to Indic study. Through seminal publications such as a grammar of Sanskrit and an extended article on the Vedas, he provided unprecedented access to one of the world's oldest languages and some of its oldest texts. Published in 1801, this three-volume translation of Brahman law was based on a Sanskrit compilation prepared by a pandit, Jagannatha Tercapanchanana, whose learned commentary is also featured in the work. Volume 1 elucidates Hindu jurisprudence on monetary issues, covering contracts, loans and deposits.

A Digest of Hindu Law, on Contracts and Successions - With a Commentary by Jagannatha Tercapanchanana (Paperback): Jagannatha... A Digest of Hindu Law, on Contracts and Successions - With a Commentary by Jagannatha Tercapanchanana (Paperback)
Jagannatha Tercapanchanana; Translated by Henry Thomas Colebrooke
R2,237 Discovery Miles 22 370 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

An honorary professor of Sanskrit and Hindu law at Fort William College in Calcutta, and a key figure in the foundation of the Royal Asiatic Society, Henry Thomas Colebrooke (1765-1837) became Britain's foremost orientalist during the early nineteenth century. Taking up the reins of Sanskrit scholarship following the death of Sir William Jones (1746-94), Colebrooke made several substantial contributions to Indic study. Through seminal publications such as a grammar of Sanskrit and an extended article on the Vedas, he provided unprecedented access to one of the world's oldest languages and some of its oldest texts. Published in 1801, this three-volume translation of Brahman law was based on a Sanskrit compilation prepared by a pandit, Jagannatha Tercapanchanana, whose learned commentary is also featured in the work. Volume 2 expounds the legal issues concerning slavery, marriage and inheritance rights.

A Digest of Hindu Law, on Contracts and Successions - With a Commentary by Jagannatha Tercapanchanana (Paperback): Jagannatha... A Digest of Hindu Law, on Contracts and Successions - With a Commentary by Jagannatha Tercapanchanana (Paperback)
Jagannatha Tercapanchanana; Translated by Henry Thomas Colebrooke
R2,250 Discovery Miles 22 500 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

An honorary professor of Sanskrit and Hindu law at Fort William College in Calcutta, and a key figure in the foundation of the Royal Asiatic Society, Henry Thomas Colebrooke (1765-1837) became Britain's foremost orientalist during the early nineteenth century. Taking up the reins of Sanskrit scholarship following the death of Sir William Jones (1746-94), Colebrooke made several substantial contributions to Indic study. Through seminal publications such as a grammar of Sanskrit and an extended article on the Vedas, he provided unprecedented access to one of the world's oldest languages and some of its oldest texts. Published in 1801, this three-volume translation of Brahman law was based on a Sanskrit compilation prepared by a pandit, Jagannatha Tercapanchanana, whose learned commentary is also featured in the work. Volume 3 continues with inheritance law, covering adoption (of sons) and bequeathal rights relating to daughters.

Claims against Iraqi Oil and Gas - Legal Considerations and Lessons Learned (Paperback): Rex J. Zedalis Claims against Iraqi Oil and Gas - Legal Considerations and Lessons Learned (Paperback)
Rex J. Zedalis
R1,157 Discovery Miles 11 570 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume presents the first and only comprehensive examination of the legal issues surrounding international debt recovery on claims against Iraqi oil and gas. In addition to presenting a snapshot view of Iraq s outstanding debt obligations and an analysis of the significance of the theory of odious debt in the context of the Iraqi situation, the list of legal issues examined includes relevant provisions of the Iraqi Constitution of 2005, controlling Security Council resolutions, pertinent articles of the KRG oil and gas law (No. 22) of 2007 and the many nuanced and technical questions raised thereby, legal pronouncements aimed at protecting Iraqi oil and gas and those adopted in selected other nations, and general problems associated with recognition and enforcement of awards or judgments that may involve such oil and gas or revenues from the sale thereof. Also discussed are the lessons learned by the handling of the Iraq debt experience and the transferability of those lessons to future situations in which resource-rich nations may have outstanding financial obligations to other members of the world community or their nationals.

Fault in American Contract Law (Paperback): Omri Ben-Shahar, Ariel Porat Fault in American Contract Law (Paperback)
Omri Ben-Shahar, Ariel Porat
R1,172 Discovery Miles 11 720 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Representing an unprecedented joint effort from top scholars in the field, this volume collects original contributions to examine the fundamental role of 'fault' in contract law. Is it immoral to breach a contract? Should a breaching party be punished more harshly for willful breach? Does it matter if the victim of breach engaged in contributory fault? Is there room for a calculus of fault within the 'efficient breach' framework? For generations, contract liability has been viewed as a no-fault regime, in sharp contrast to tort liability. Is this dichotomy real? Is it justified? How do the American and European traditions compare? In exploring these and related issues, the essays in this volume bring together a variety of outlooks, including economic, psychological, philosophical, and comparative approaches to law.

Commercial Contract Law - Transatlantic Perspectives (Hardcover, New): Larry A. DiMatteo, Qi Zhou, Severine Saintier, Keith... Commercial Contract Law - Transatlantic Perspectives (Hardcover, New)
Larry A. DiMatteo, Qi Zhou, Severine Saintier, Keith Rowley
R4,590 Discovery Miles 45 900 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book focuses on the law of commercial contracts as constructed by the U.S. and UK legal systems. Leading scholars from both sides of the Atlantic provide works of original scholarship focusing on current debates and trends from the two dominant common law systems. The chapters approach the subject areas from a variety of perspectives doctrinal analysis, law and economic analysis, and social-legal studies, as well as other theoretical perspectives. The book covers the major themes that underlie the key debates relating to commercial contract law: role of consent; normative theories of contract law; contract design and good faith; implied terms and interpretation; policing contract behavior; misrepresentation, breach, and remedies; and the regional and international harmonization of contract law. Contributors provide insights on the many commonalities, but more interestingly, on the key divergences of the United States and United Kingdom's approaches to numerous areas of contract law. Such a comparative analysis provides a basis for future developments and improvements of commercial contract law in both countries, as well as other countries that are members of the common law systems. At the same time, insights gathered here should also be of interest to scholars and practitioners of the civil law tradition."

Vitiation of Contracts - International Contractual Principles and English Law (Hardcover, New): Gareth Spark Vitiation of Contracts - International Contractual Principles and English Law (Hardcover, New)
Gareth Spark
R3,324 Discovery Miles 33 240 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Vitiation of Contracts proposes a new theory to explain the rationale of general vitiating factors in English contract law. It provides a clear link to voluntariness as the foundation of contractual liability and compares the English position, in light of this theory, with the Principles of International Commercial Contracts (PICC), the Principles of European Contract Law (PECL), the Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR) and the US Restatement (Second) of Contracts.

Contract Law - Rules, Theory, and Context (Hardcover, New): Brian H. Bix Contract Law - Rules, Theory, and Context (Hardcover, New)
Brian H. Bix
R1,865 Discovery Miles 18 650 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

To gain a deep understanding of contract law, one needs to master not only the rules and principles of the field, but also its underlying theory and justification, and its long and intricate history. This book offers an accessible introduction to all aspects of American contract law, useful to both first-year law students and advanced contract scholars. The book is grounded on up-to-date scholarship and contains detailed references to cases, statutes, Restatements and international legal principles. The book takes the reader from contract formation through interpretation and remedies, considering both the practical and theoretical aspects throughout. Each chapter also includes helpful lists of suggested further reading.

Accounting for Profit for Breach of Contract - Theory and Practice (Hardcover, New): Katy Barnett Accounting for Profit for Breach of Contract - Theory and Practice (Hardcover, New)
Katy Barnett
R3,994 Discovery Miles 39 940 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book defends the view that an award of an account of profits (or 'disgorgement damages') for breach of contract will sometimes be justifiable, and it fits within the orthodox principles and cases in contract law. However, there is some confusion as to when such an award should be made. The moral bases for disgorgement damages are deterrence and punishment, which shape the remedy in important ways. Courts are also concerned with vindication of the claimant's performance interest, and it is pivotal that the claimant can procure a substitute performance via an award of damages or specific relief. The book argues that disgorgement damages should be available in two categories of case: 'second sale' cases, where the defendant breaches his contract with the claimant to make a more profitable contract with a third party; and 'agency problem' cases, where the defendant promises the claimant he will not do a certain thing, and the claimant finds it difficult to supervise the performance. Moreover, disgorgement may be full or partial, and 'reasonable fee damages' for breach of contract are best understood as partial disgorgement rather than 'restitutionary damages.' Equitable bars to relief should also be adopted in relation to disgorgement damages, as should allowances for skill and effort. Accounting for Profit for Breach of Contract will be of interest to contract and commercial lawyers, and it will be especially valuable to anyone with an interest in contract remedies and restitution. The book draws on case law in a number of common law jurisdictions, primarily England, Wales, and Australia. (Series: Hart Studies in Private Law)

Principle and Policy in Contract Law - Competing or Complementary Concepts? (Hardcover, New): Stephen Waddams Principle and Policy in Contract Law - Competing or Complementary Concepts? (Hardcover, New)
Stephen Waddams
R2,341 Discovery Miles 23 410 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Although presented as being derived from the past, principles in contract law have been subject to constant reformulation, thereby facilitating legal change while simultaneously seeming to preclude it. Principle and policy have been mutually interdependent, propositions not usually being called principles unless they have been perceived to lead to just results in particular cases, and as likely to produce results in future cases that accord with common sense, commercial convenience and sound public policy. The influence of policy has been frequent in contract law, but Stephen Waddams argues that an unmediated appeal to non-legal sources of policy has been constrained by the need to formulate generalised propositions recognised as legal principles. This interrelation of principle and policy has played an important role in enabling an uncodified system to hold a middle course between a rigid formalism on the one hand and an unconstrained instrumentalism on the other.

Networks as Connected Contracts - Edited with an Introduction by Hugh Collins (Hardcover): Gunther Teubner Networks as Connected Contracts - Edited with an Introduction by Hugh Collins (Hardcover)
Gunther Teubner; Translated by Michelle Everson
R3,870 Discovery Miles 38 700 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Business networks consist of several independent businesses that enter into interrelated contracts, conferring on the parties many of the benefits of co-ordination achieved through vertical integration in a single firm, without creating a single integrated business such as a corporation or partnership. Retail franchises are one such example of a network, but the most common instance is a credit card transaction between a customer, retailer, and the issuer of the card. How should the law analyse this hybrid economic phenomenon? It is neither exactly a market relationship - because that overlooks the co-ordination, relational qualities and interdependence of the contracts - nor is it a type of business association or company, since it lacks a centralised co-ordinating authority that receives the residual profits. This book is a translation of Gunther Teubner's classic work on networks, setting out his novel legal concept of 'connected contracts'. In it he explains how this concept addresses the problems posed by networks, such as the question whether the network as a whole can be held legally responsible for damage that it causes to third parties such as customers. A substantial introduction by Hugh Collins explains the analysis of networks in the context of German law and the systems theory from which Teubner approaches the topic. The introduction also explores how far the concept of connected contracts might assist in the common law world, including the UK and the USA, to address the same problems that arise in cases involving networks. As well as making a contribution to comparative law and legal theory, the book will be of interest to scholars interested in contract law, commercial law and the law of business associations.

A Theory of Contract Law - Empirical Insights and Moral Psychology (Hardcover): Peter A Alces A Theory of Contract Law - Empirical Insights and Moral Psychology (Hardcover)
Peter A Alces
R4,091 Discovery Miles 40 910 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In the past few decades, scholars have offered positive, normative, and most recently, interpretive theories of contract law. These theories have proceeded primarily (indeed, necessarily) from deontological and consequentialist premises. In A Theory of Contract Law: Empirical Understandings and Moral Psychology, Professor Peter A. Alces confronts the leading interpretive theories of contract and demonstrates their interpretive doctrinal failures. Professor Alces presents the leading canonical cases that inform the extant theories of Contract law in both their historical and transactional contexts and, argues that moral psychology provides a better explanation for the contract doctrine than do alternative comprehensive interpretive approaches.

Comparative Foundations of a European Law of Set-Off and Prescription (Paperback): Reinhard Zimmermann Comparative Foundations of a European Law of Set-Off and Prescription (Paperback)
Reinhard Zimmermann
R1,125 Discovery Miles 11 250 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The emergence of a European private law is one of the great issues on the legal agenda of our time. Among the most prominent initiatives furthering this process is the work of the Commission on European Contract Law. The essays collected in this 2002 volume have their origin within this context. They explore two practically very important topics which had hitherto been largely neglected in comparative legal literature: set-off and 'extinctive' prescription (or limitation of actions). Professor Zimmermann lays the comparative foundations for a common approach which may provide the basis for a set of European principles. At the same time, the essays provide practical examples of the arguments that can be employed in the process of harmonising European private law on a rational basis. They explore topics such as the comparative experiences in the various modern legal systems and the direction in which the international development is heading.

Measuring Damages in the Law of Obligations - The Search for Harmonised Principles (Hardcover, New): Sirko Harder Measuring Damages in the Law of Obligations - The Search for Harmonised Principles (Hardcover, New)
Sirko Harder
R4,028 Discovery Miles 40 280 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book challenges certain differences between contract, tort and equity in relation to the measure (in a broad sense) of damages. Damages are defined as the monetary award made by a court in consequence of a breach of contract, a tort or an equitable wrong. In all these causes of action, damages usually aim to put the claimant into the position the claimant would be in without the wrong. Even though the main objective of damages is thus the same for each cause of action, their measure is not. While some aspects of the measure of damages are more or less harmonised between contract, tort and equity (e.g. causation in fact and mitigation), significant differences exist in relation to (1) remoteness of damage, which is the question of whether, when and to which degree damage needs to be foreseeable to be recoverable; (2) the compensability of non-pecuniary loss such as pain and suffering, distress and loss of reputation; (3) the effect of contributory negligence, which is the victim's contribution to the occurrence of the wrong or the ensuing loss through unreasonable conduct prior to the wrong; (4) the circumstances under which victims of wrongs can claim the gain the wrongdoer has made from the wrong; and (5) the availability and scope of exemplary (or punitive) damages. For each of the five topics, this book examines the present position in contract, tort and equity and establishes the differences between the three areas. It goes on to scrutinise the arguments in defence of existing differences. The conclusion on each topic is that the present differences between contract, tort and equity cannot be justified on merits and should be removed through a harmonisation of the relevant principles.

Fault in American Contract Law (Hardcover): Omri Ben-Shahar, Ariel Porat Fault in American Contract Law (Hardcover)
Omri Ben-Shahar, Ariel Porat
R3,331 Discovery Miles 33 310 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Representing an unprecedented joint effort from top scholars in the field, this volume collects original contributions to examine the fundamental role of 'fault' in contract law. Is it immoral to breach a contract? Should a breaching party be punished more harshly for willful breach? Does it matter if the victim of breach engaged in contributory fault? Is there room for a calculus of fault within the 'efficient breach' framework? For generations, contract liability has been viewed as a no-fault regime, in sharp contrast to tort liability. Is this dichotomy real? Is it justified? How do the American and European traditions compare? In exploring these and related issues, the essays in this volume bring together a variety of outlooks, including economic, psychological, philosophical, and comparative approaches to law.

Claims against Iraqi Oil and Gas - Legal Considerations and Lessons Learned (Hardcover): Rex J. Zedalis Claims against Iraqi Oil and Gas - Legal Considerations and Lessons Learned (Hardcover)
Rex J. Zedalis
R3,305 Discovery Miles 33 050 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume presents the first comprehensive examination of the legal issues surrounding international debt recovery on claims against Iraqi oil and gas. In addition to presenting a snapshot view of Iraq's outstanding debt obligations and an analysis of the significance of the theory of odious debt in the context of the Iraqi situation, the list of legal issues examined includes relevant provisions of the Iraqi Constitution of 2005, controlling Security Council resolutions, pertinent articles of the KRG oil and gas law (No. 22) of 2007 and the many nuanced and technical questions raised thereby, legal pronouncements aimed at protecting Iraqi oil and gas and those adopted in selected other nations, and general problems associated with recognition and enforcement of awards or judgments that may involve such oil and gas or revenues from the sale thereof. Also discussed are the lessons learned by the handling of the Iraq debt experience and the transferability of those lessons to future situations.

Contract as Assumption - Essays on a Theme (Hardcover): Brian Coote Contract as Assumption - Essays on a Theme (Hardcover)
Brian Coote; Edited by Rick Bigwood; Preface by Rick Bigwood
R3,426 Discovery Miles 34 260 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

It has many times been said that contracts involve assumptions of obligation or liability, but what that means, and what it is that is assumed, have not often been discussed. It is to further such discussion that some of the author's previously published writings around this subject have been brought together in this book. His basic premises are that contractual obligation and liability in this context are two sides to the same coin and that an assumption of one is an assumption of both. Parties are bound not because liability has been imposed upon them by law as a result of their having entered into a contract but because, in the act of assuming, they have imposed it upon themselves. Contract provides a facility the purpose of which is to enable this to be done within the limits prescribed by law. The implication of these premises are much more significant than might be supposed when applied to such areas of contract as formation, consideration, intention to contract, exception clauses, privity and damages. The book concludes with a treatment of the role of assumption in tort. Because of the importance of its subject matter and its wide-ranging treatment, this book should appeal not only to teachers and postgraduate students of contract but also to practitioners in the field and to anyone else with an interest in contract theory.

Purchasing Contracts - a Practical Guide (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition): Graham Fuller Purchasing Contracts - a Practical Guide (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Graham Fuller
R795 Discovery Miles 7 950 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Purchasing Contracts will assist those who work with contracts for the procurement of goods and services in the UK. This second edition contains additional chapters, including one on the special UK rules governing purchasing by public bodies and utilities. The subjects of misrepresentation, exemption clauses, and electronic contracting are among those that have been updated and covered in more detail. The bill on bribery, currently going through Parliament, is also dealt with.

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