Mistake and non-disclosure of facts : models for English contract law
著者
書誌事項
Mistake and non-disclosure of facts : models for English contract law
Oxford University Press, 2012
- タイトル別名
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Clarendon law lectures
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注記
"Clarendon law lectures"--Cover jacket
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In this book Hugh Beale examines the case for reforming the law on mistake and non-disclosure of fact to bring English law closer to the law in much of continental Europe. There, and in common law countries like the US, a party may avoid a contract for mistake of fact on a more liberal basis, and a party who deliberately keeps silent knowing that the other party is making a mistake may be guilty of fraud. This is not necessarily the case in England and Wales.
Developing a proposal for law reform, the author concedes that the English courts require a law that puts great emphasis on certainty and expects parties to look out for their own interests; but posits that this individualistic approach is not suitable for smaller businesses which are less sophisticated and which are likely to be making low value contracts, so that relative cost of taking advice will be high. He argues that the solution may not be to reform English contract law generally, but
to support the development of an optional instrument on contract law, along the lines of the Common European Sales Law recently proposed by the European Commission.
This measure is aimed specifically at the needs of small and medium enterprises, and contains the protective rules found in the other jurisdictions. It is aimed primarily at cross-border sales, but Member States would be given the option of adopting it for domestic transactions too. This would give small businesses the choice of using the current "hard-nosed" law or adopting the more protective optional instrument, recognizing that different parties require different things from the law
governing their contract.
目次
- I: DEFINING THE ISSUES
- Background: 'European' Principles of Contract Law
- Defining the Issue
- Real Differences between English and the 'European' Laws
- Conclusions
- II: MISTAKE AND NON-DISCLOSURE IN OTHER SYSTEMS
- Commonwealth Laws
- European Models
- United States
- What to Make of the Survey?
- III: POSSIBLE MODELS FOR ENGLISH LAW
- Models Not to Follow
- The Underlying Aim: Protection of Autonomy or Fairness in Exchange?
- A Plausible 'Informed Consent' Model
- Remedies
- A Provisional Proposal
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