Tipo de evento: Seminario web
- Fecha/hora de inicio:
- 1 August 2013
- Fecha/hora de finalización:
- 1 August 2013
The reduction to writing of an agreed-upon understanding among parties can sometimes be viewed as a cursory step in formalizing a business relationship. Yet the manner in which concepts are expressed on a page is often as important as the concepts themselves. Solid contract-drafting skills are therefore essential tools to any professional who deals with transactions or business relationships. Unfortunately, although contract counterparties might have the best of intentions, many contracts—even those drafted by experienced attorneys and those relating to the most prominent of transactions—are plagued with ambiguities, inconsistencies, unintended imprecision, and “bloat” from unnecessary legalese, rendering them confusing, risky, and potentially very costly.
Please join Vincent R. Martorana as he covers fundamental—but often unconsidered—principles to assist attorneys with drafting, analyzing, and interpreting contracts.
WHAT YOU’LL LEARN
Unlike many other contract-drafting courses, this course focuses on the manner in which concepts are expressed in a contract, rather than the substance of any provision or contract in particular. Topics include:
- The importance of language in contracts
- Categories of contract language (including language of performance, obligations, prohibitions, discretionary language, representations, acknowledgments, and language of policy)
- The distinction between “shall,” “will,” and “must”
- Use of the active voice and passive voice
- Legal archaisms
- AND MUCH MORE!
For more information or to register, please visit commerciallawwebadvisor.com.