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  • 8/6/2019 Weagree eBook, General Contract Drafting Principles, After Nomination

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  • 8/6/2019 Weagree eBook, General Contract Drafting Principles, After Nomination

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    Thank you for downloading Weagrees e-book General contract drafting principles!

    We hope that the guidelines, suggestions and best practices in this e-book help you improving yourcontract drafting style and effectiveness in contracting. Note that the e-book is a large part of the first

    chapter of the (hardcopy) book Drafting contracts1, which will be published soon.

    This e-book is not free: you had to leave us your name and e-mail address before downloading it. We

    collected your name and e-mail because:

    (a) We like to share best practices of contract drafting (and encourage you to give us feedback if

    you like).

    (b) We would like to inform you about Weagrees future e-books on contract drafting.

    (c) Occasionally, we might share milestones that Weagree achieved in accelerating contract

    drafting2. We will notsend you advertisements or the kind of newsletters you already receive alltoo often.

    The download of your e-book is personal: if you believe that other people should read it, we kindly ask

    you to point them at the Weagree website.

    Nomination. Weagree has been nominated for the Innovating Justice Award! The award is for

    innovations that bring professional legal services to a breakthrough level. It is worldwide: other

    nominees come from the US, Latin America, India and the Netherlands. They (and Weagree) have

    been selected by Innovating Justice, a platform of international legal non-profit organisations.

    Voting. For Weagree, the nomination is a phenomenal recognition! Weagree has been proving to be a

    disruptive breakthrough for the legal service industry. Help us become one of those three most-voted

    nominees for the Innovating Justice Award and votevia this link.

    Enjoy!

    Willem Wiggers

    Amsterdam, 9 May 2011

    1 Willem J.H. Wiggers, Drafting contracts, Techniques, best practice rules and recommendations related to contractdrafting, forthcoming (Spring/Summer 2011).

    2 We will not provide your details to third parties. Obviously, we will stop sending you any mails if you indicate us so.

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    Help Weagree win the Innovating Justice Award with your vote

    (Vote via this shortened link: http://bit.ly/iikHt6).

    2011 Weagree B.V. www.weagree.com

    GENERAL CONTRACT DRAFTING PRINCIPLES

    Brief guidelines, suggestions and best practicesto improve your style and effectiveness

    Each contract drafter should write a contract with only a few principal drafting principles in mind.

    Furthermore, a contract drafter who works in a multinational context should have a general

    understanding of the characteristics of different national legal systems and be aware of significant

    differences between legal cultures.

    A contract should be drafted in plain English, meaning that the language used is clear and as simple

    as reasonably possible. A drafter must be accurate. The contract should be consistentwith regard tostyle, structure, terminology and level of detail. A drafter may use vague terms but should be

    conscious of how and when to use them, and should avoid ambiguities. This paragraph will elaborate

    on these drafting qualities.

    1.1 Plain English: simple and clear

    Use plain English when drafting contracts: a businessman should be able to understand what it says.

    The involvement of a legal counsel should be necessary only to give an impartial view, oversee the

    legal consequences, to clarify that certain phrases are normal or to confirm that indeed they reflect the

    parties intentions. The legal aspects of a contract should be limited to what is being expressed, not

    how it is expressed. (No tricks!) Old fashioned contractual language, which is not plain English

    (anymore) will make a contract harder to read. It will also not serve the interests of the parties.

    Plain English. What is plain language, especially plain legal language? It is ordinary adult English,

    used in day-to-day context. It is language stripped of archaic legalese or the latest business jargon

    and vocabulary, supported by a proper layout and typography of the text. As regards spelling, a

    multinational company may prefer British English (or another) to U.S., Canadian or Australian English

    but in either case, language should be used consistently.

    Dont. Nevertheless, do not use:

    Purchasershould not

    oweSeller

    its

    aint

    wont

    cant

    for obvious reasons (?)

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    General contract drafting principles 2

    Brief guidelines, suggestions and best practices

    Help Weagree win the Innovating Justice Award with your vote

    (Vote via this shortened link: http://bit.ly/iikHt6).

    2011 Weagree B.V. www.weagree.com

    No archaisms. There is no need to include archaisms such as WITNESSETHor oddities such as the

    use of both words and numerals to express numbers (words may be useful because a number is easy

    to misprint, but equally risky is updating figures whilst forgetting the corresponding words; words to

    ascertain that 30 days are (thirty) days and not 13 is ridiculous).

    (a) Short sentences

    Everyone knows that short sentences are much easier to read than longer ones. Contracts are

    amongst the least readable texts one can imagine. Apart from the abstract language, the typical

    reason for this is the use of lengthy sentences. Therefore, be concise and to the point and address

    only those matters that must be elaborated on to avoid surprises or confusion, or those matters which

    have relevance in litigated disputes.

    Some organisations have a rule that no sentence should exceed 17 words and that no word should

    exceed five syllables. This may be excessively prescriptive but it imposes an excellent discipline. It

    certainly requires the drafter to express ideas one at a time. A true dragon is the following sentence:

    Exclusivity. The Seller covenants and agrees that for a period of ninety (90) days after the date

    first written above (the Effective Date) or such shorter period as set forth below (as the case

    may be, the Exclusivity Period), none of the Seller, its affiliates or subsidiaries will, and they

    will cause their respective shareholders, directors, officers, managers, employees, agents,

    advisors or representatives not to, directly or indirectly, solicit offers for, encourage, negotiate,

    discuss, or enter into any agreement, understanding or commitment regarding, a possible director indirect sale, merger, combination, consolidation, joint venture, partnership, recapitalisation,

    restructuring, refinancing or other disposition of all or any material part of the Company or its

    subsidiaries or any of the Company's or its subsidiaries' assets or issued or unissued capital

    stock (a Company Sale) with any party other than Purchaser or provide any information to any

    party other than Purchaser regarding the Company in that connection; provided that, (i) for the

    time period commencing on the Effective Date and ending at 11:59 p.m. Central European Time

    on 7 July 2007 (the Bid Confirmation Date), the Parties shall work together in good faith and

    use commercially reasonable efforts to facilitate due diligence by Purchaser and their advisors

    to confirm, based on the information made available to Purchaser or their advisors prior to the

    Bid Confirmation Date, the intent of Purchaser to implement the Transaction pursuant to the

    terms of this Heads of Agreement and if Purchaser does not deliver notice to Seller of suchintent by 11:59 p.m. Central European Time on (or otherwise prior to) the Bid Confirmation Date

    (such notice, a Bid Confirmation), then Seller shall have the right to terminate the Exclusivity

    Period effective as of (but not prior to) the Bid Confirmation Date by providing written notice to

    Purchaser by no later than 5:00 p.m. Central European Time on (but not prior to) the day

    following the Bid Confirmation Date; and (ii) if Purchaser delivers the Bid Confirmation or if such

    termination notice set forth in the preceding clause (i) is not given, the Seller shall have the right

    to terminate the Exclusivity Period effective as of (but not prior to) 11:59 p.m. Central European

    Time on the sixtieth (60th) day following the Effective Date by delivering written notice of such

    termination to Purchaser by no later than 5:00 p.m. Central European Time on (but not prior to)

    the sixty-first (61st) day following the Effective Date.

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    General contract drafting principles 3

    Brief guidelines, suggestions and best practices

    Help Weagree win the Innovating Justice Award with your vote

    (Vote via this shortened link: http://bit.ly/iikHt6).

    2011 Weagree B.V. www.weagree.com

    Techniques to simplify such sentences are to think first and to conceptualise: does it really increase

    certainty if you draft the long lists of persons, actions or matters?! A list also has drawbacks such as

    encouraging creativity towards the grey areas of the listed matters; concepts are more likely to capture

    any failing manifestations; a list of concepts lacks conceptuality. The above sentence can be

    shortened easily by a better use of definitions, by separating out the condition (i.e. the second half), by

    defining:

    the exhaustive (?) list of related persons (i.e. their respective shareholders, directors, officers,

    managers, employees, agents, advisors or representatives);

    several or all (?) of their prohibited actions (i.e. not to, directly or indirectly, solicit offers for,

    encourage, negotiate, discuss, or enter into any agreement, understanding or commitment);

    and all (?) the possible transaction structures (i.e. a possible direct or indirect sale, merger,

    combination, consolidation, joint venture, partnership, recapitalization, restructuring, refinancing

    or other disposition of all or any material part of the Company or its subsidiaries or any of the

    Company's or its subsidiaries' assets or issued or unissued capital stock).

    In other words, a quasi-exhaustive list could be reduced into concise wording addressing the relevant

    concept rather than its manifestations.

    Uncertainty can be taken out if abstract references are made concrete. A reference to time (e.g. 5:00

    p.m. Central European Time on (but not prior to) the sixty-first (61st) day following the Effective Date)

    can replaced by the actual date and time.

    Another technique to increase legibility is to separate out the exceptions, qualifications or conditions.

    Often, the visual subdivision in separate (indented) subparagraphs increases readability. Sentences

    should be short-cut if they pile up clauses that could well stand on their own or if exceptions,

    qualifications or conditions can be separated and moved to a separate sentence.

    (b) Keep subject and verb together left-right principle

    SVO. Sentences in the English language fairly strictly follow an order of subject-verb-object (SVO).

    Texts are easier understood if the actor (the subject) and the determination of his action (the verb) are

    close together at the beginning of the sentence. A document becomes harder to read when you create

    unnecessary gaps between the subject and the verb. The Dutch and Germans have the patience for

    that. If the sentence also contains an object, this would be best positioned early on in the sentence but

    always after the subject and the verb. Sometimes, this should be achieved by turning the intervening

    words into a separate sentence or by moving them to the beginning or end of the sentence. An

    example:

    The Seller hereby sells and transfers the boat.

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    General contract drafting principles 4

    Brief guidelines, suggestions and best practices

    Help Weagree win the Innovating Justice Award with your vote

    (Vote via this shortened link: http://bit.ly/iikHt6).

    2011 Weagree B.V. www.weagree.com

    Here the seller is the subject (S), sell is the verb (V) and boat is the object (O). This very simply

    example can be contrasted with the following:

    The Seller hereby sells and transfers, subject to purchaser providing x, y and z indemnities, the

    boat.

    In this example, readability improves ifthe boatis moved to the beginning or, probably even better, the

    indemnities can be moved to the next sentence or even a separate article headed Indemnities.

    Order concepts. Sometimes, the object of an obligation consists of several concepts. If you prefer not

    to split the sentence, it is a good idea to structure the object of the obligation so that the reader will

    catch all the concepts at once and is able to remember each. In line with this, use a natural sequence

    in which the concepts are commonly experienced. An example of a messy sequence:

    to use, sell, have sold, manufacture, have manufactured, modify, have modified, distribute

    and have distributed the Licenced Product.

    Obviously, a product is not first used, then sold, then manufactured etc. Few people can reproduce

    this. Conversely, many people are able to reproduce even a long sequence if it is logical. Furthermore,

    bring together the items that relate to each other:

    Force Majeure means [acts of God such as earthquake, flood, storm or lightning, fire ],

    [accident, explosion, sabotage, war, terrorism, riot, civil disturbance, epidemic]

    Left-right principle. You will make reading easier if you formulate the sentence such that it reads

    from a known or familiar context into the main message. In many languages, the unguided reader will

    read to the end of a sentence in an (unspoken) ascending or descending tone:

    At the end of the sentence, where the tone reaches the peak (or bottom), the reader unconsciously

    seeks the most important information. This is called the left -right principle and may help the writer

    structure a text and each sentence.

    The left-right principle applies to structuring sentences, to structuring a paragraph or section and to

    structuring your entire contract and even the set of transaction documents. The principle implies that

    simple matters are addressed first and complications later on in the sentence, paragraph or contract3.

    3 Joseph M. Williams, Style Lessons in clarity and grace, Pearson Longman 2007 (9th ed.), 92 ff. Barbara Minto,The pyramid principle Logic in writing and thinking, Prentice Hall/FT, 2009 (3rd ed.).

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    If the most important information is halfway through the sentence (instead of at the end), the reader

    may miss the importance of it or even the entire point. Contract clauses should adopt the left-right

    principle by limiting and structuring the information in the sentences of a section. For example:

    A is followed by B and C. B implies D. C causes E. D and E support the conclusion F.

    The left-right principle somewhat discords with how people think: a normal person starts with the main

    point and then deals with the exceptions and limitations. You would make the reader comfortable by

    first driving your point home. The left-right principle on the other hand, suggests using familiar

    concepts and a known context first and then work towards the key point. A technique to redress this

    discordance is to limit the scope of a sentence to introducing only one or two new things per

    sentence.

    Signalling sentence. It also helps to start a paragraph with a signalling sentence addressing the main

    topic or conclusion and then restart the paragraph. The topical paragraph structure could therefore

    become:

    A leads to F. A is followed by B and C. B implies D. C causes E. D and E support the conclusion

    F.

    The signalling (or topical) sentence may well be used to convey a basic, but often forgotten,

    statement. For example, a research agreement or a joint development agreement normally supports a

    project plan or statement of work, where those latter documents are the essence of the relationship; inparticular if one party is required to propose a project setup, it makes sense to start the article dealing

    with the contents of the project plan or SoW with:

    Service Provider shall work out all details of each Development Project in a Statement of Work.

    Each Statement of Work proposed by Service Provider to Customer shall set forth

    The left right-right principle, as well as using a signalling sentence, also discords with how people

    perceive other peoples communications: an audience tends to visualise. This would mean that a

    message is better received if you start with an example and continue with the substance. If you want

    to prevent a reader visualising his or her own example, start with the right one yourself. Then

    elaborate on that example to make your point. For example:

    The Parties shall use best efforts to have the Conditions satisfied as soon as practicable. In

    particular, Purchaser shall, in respect of the Condition in Article 2.1(c): (a) make appropriate

    filings; and (b) propose all such remedies as

    In this example, the first sentence states the main principle. This makes reading the subsequent

    sentence easier. It would be understood as an elaboration on the principle of best efforts. Note,

    however, that if you replace in particularby the word furthermore(orin addition), the second sentence

    converts into a firm obligation standing on its own (!)

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    (c) Use the active tense, personalize sentences

    and avoid nominalisation

    Active tense. Another golden rule for writing texts, equally valuable in drafting contracts, is to use the

    active tense instead of the passive. Often, the active voice results in a sentence that is less wordy and

    more direct.

    When using the passive tense, there is the potential danger that it is unclear which party is obliged to

    perform. To solve this, the drafter should insert additional words like by Seller. A technique to prevent

    ambiguities is to realise that each provision should mention the debtor of the obligation. In most cases,

    this will almost automatically turn the sentence into the active tense in which the debtor of an

    obligation is also the (grammatical) subject of the sentence.

    Note, however, that mentioning an actor is sometimes irrelevant for the purpose of a provision. This

    may apply to conditions and to limitations or qualifications in a subordinate clause:

    If any proceedings or investigations have been commenced that obstructs or may result in a

    prohibition of, or interference with, the Transaction

    Rephrasing this example into the active tense requires that an actor is introduced, which is without

    merit.

    Nominalisation. Nouns are more tiresome to read than verbs. Active sentences tend to build verb-

    heavy structures that would, in the passive, be covered by nouns. A verb gives a sentence its action,whereas a noun places the reader outside the context. This means that a text also becomes more

    vivid in the active voice. Not only does the active voice keep a sentence simpler, it also tends to make

    the sentence clearer.

    Lawyers are known to nominalise verbs: in the lawyer's eye, a shareholder does not resolve but

    adoptsormakes a resolution; a buyer does not paybut makes a payment; a party does not notify in

    writingbut gives a written notice; a service provider does not act appropriatelybut takes appropriate

    action. No! Try to avoid these nominalisations and build on verbs as much as possible.

    Personalise! A method to make contracts dry as dust is to impersonalise the contract provisions.

    Impersonal sentences can be recognised by phrases such as It is agreed that. Often, this phrase is

    redundant because it would be followed by something like A shall do x and y, which is sufficient and

    clear. If it is not, the actor (i.e. the debtor of the obligation) is probably missing. Similar examples, in

    which the debtor potentially remains unclear, start with The Parties agree to.

    Use the singular. If possible, obligations and other provisions should be drafted in the singular and

    using the present tense. The idea behind this is that the use of plural nouns and prepositions such as

    and, or, each, every or any may create ambiguity. With those prepositions, it may be questionable

    whether in a particular context a reference should be made to a single member of the group identified

    by the noun, or to the entire group. For example, instead of:

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    The Parties shall promptly notify each other of the occurrence of events of force majeure.

    It is better to write:

    A Party shall promptly notify the other Party of the occurrence of an event of force majeure.

    Nevertheless, whilst Europeans are comfortable addressing a party or a thing by writing hisorher, in

    U.S. style contracts, the gender is forcefully avoided. A technique for avoiding the issue is to use the

    plural (they) instead of the singular (his or her (or is it her or his?)).

    (d) Delete unnecessary words

    In der Beschrnkung zeigt sich erst der Meister.4

    (Dare to delete.)

    Finalising a contract by deleting the superfluous words makes it precise. Cleaning up a contract

    starts with deleting truly redundant wording. Redundant are:

    [The Parties agree that] Borrower shall

    [Licensor and Licencee agree that] if

    In the examples, it is appropriate to start with Borrower shallorIf. Even worse are lead-ins such as It

    is agreed that or Licencee acknowledges and agrees that There is rarely any need to include

    such a lead-in, unless it serves to emphasise a carve-out. Similarly, replace the names of the parties(e.g. Licensor and Licencee, Seller and Purchaser, Lessor and Lessee, Service Provider and

    Customer) by the Parties.

    Necessity and importance. Cleaning up a draft contract includes a closer review as to whether

    provisions are necessary. In particular, if an obligation implies a strong incentive to perform (e.g.

    because payment of a certain price requires on time delivery of a standard product), a purchaser

    would not need to provide for elaborate provisions on tests of conformity. Deleting unnecessary words

    brings the truly important matters to the surface. This is even more important in contract drafting than

    in other forms of writing. A woolly novelist may bore the reader; but a wordy contract drafter may even

    create ambiguity.

    Functionality and balance. In a well-drafted contract each part has its role in relation to the other

    parts, and all parts fit together in a balanced and efficient manner. The use of unnecessary words in a

    contract provision may lead to unwanted questions: now that the whole contract is so much to the

    point, why did the parties elaborate on this particular item? Or: look at the detailed level of that other

    provision; if it was so important to provide for solu tions on this part, wouldnt it have been logical if

    the parties wanted itthat they had actually done so?

    Choose one angle only. Consider the following example:

    4 Goethe, Natur und Kunst, 1802.

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    Seller shall specifically indemnify, defend and hold harmless Target and Purchaser from and

    against any Losses which are incurred or suffered by any such party and arising out of, relating

    to, resulting from, or incurred in connection with any shortages with respect to carbon dioxide

    emissions allowances for the calendar year ending 31 December 2010. For this purpose,

    Losses means all liabilities, losses, damages, fees, Encumbrances, Taxes, awards, judgments,

    assessments, fines, sanctions, penalties, charges, costs, expenses, payments, all interest

    thereon, all costs and expenses of investigating and defending any claim, lawsuit, arbitration or

    proceeding and any appeal therefrom, all reasonable attorneys, accountants and expert

    witness fees incurred in connection therewith and all amounts paid incident to any compromise

    or settlement of any such claim, lawsuit or arbitration.

    The drafter of this specific indemnity entangled many related concepts by referring to the same thing

    in different ways. I draw your attention to a few that have a common denominator:

    liability(i.e. the legal consequence);

    damages(i.e. the legal subject of liability);

    costs and expenses(i.e. the factual and accounting terms for only a part of the damages, in this

    case even further specified by reference to costs of all imaginable legal support and dispute

    settlement proceedings);

    payments(i.e.the factual action of transferring money);

    claims(i.e. the procedural act by which someone is held liable);

    incurred or suffered by(i.e. the way the damages came into existence and timing); and

    arising out of(i.e. the causation required for liability).

    A good lawyer would probably delete the legal and accounting terminology: the legal terminology

    applies by operation of the law itself, and accounting terms should otherwise come in under the legal

    heading of damages. Because some legal concepts such as damages and causation can give rise

    to disputes as regards their scope, it may be important to provide for uncertainties inherent to such

    concepts. The drafter would have achieved a better result with:

    Seller shall indemnify Purchaser against all damages related to any shortage of carbon dioxide

    emission allowances granted for the year 2009 (including damages as a consequence of any

    prohibition to operate).

    Similarly, the following provision can be much shorter:

    This Agreement may be terminated at any time prior to the Completion by either Party, if the

    Completion shall not have been consummated on or before 31 March 2008, provided that the

    termination right shall not be available to any Party whose failure to perform any material

    obligation under this Agreement is the cause of such delay.

    The provision states an exception that will likely apply in every mature jurisdiction; you cannot have

    your cake and eat it too. Therefore, more appropriate would be:

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    Each Party may terminate this Agreement at any time before Completion, if the Completion

    shall not take place before 1 April 2010.

    However, the principle of caveat emptor (buyer beware) and the parol evidence rule in English law

    may create an incentive to adopt a cautious approach to drafting, explicitly setting out the important

    exceptions.

    What about the following? Is it really necessary to make sure that if you refer to a third party, this is

    substituted by the defined term Person, defined as:

    an individual, a corporation, a partnership, a limited liability company, a joint venture, a joint

    stock or other company, an association, a trust or other entity or organisation, including a local

    or national government or an agency, institute or instrumentality thereof?

    The elements that might trigger some uncertainty, if any, are probably the inclusion of (informal)

    partnerships and various governmental bodies. Rather than the use of a definition, a clarification in the

    interpretation section would be more appropriate. But reconsider first: if a warranty states that neither

    Seller nor Target received a notice of any Person relating to the status of X, would you consider that

    there is a likelihood that, whilst a local governmental authority might fail to qualify as a person within

    the strict meaning of the word, a liability claim will fail (if Target actually did receive a warning notice)

    on the ground that the warranty did not specify the authority as such Person?

    A good drafter determines what is important. It is important to understand where in the business thereal risks or avoidable exposures are, or where the desired performance by a party is not self-evident.

    Secondly, a drafter should consider whether providing for it is necessary;in other words, who carries

    the burden of any true uncertainty? Often, deleting words or clauses makes clear what really matters.

    1.2 Accuracy

    Using plain English is a step towards the drafting skill of accuracy. Accuracy requires more than the

    capability to distinguish legal, factual, accounting, procedural and legal-procedural concepts from each

    other. A lawyer should also identify the subtleties resulting from the negotiations. A skilled drafter

    translates this into accurate wording, ties in precisely those aspects which fill any unaddressed gaps,omits to clarify matters that were deliberately left vague and avoids ambiguities.

    (a) Thinkanalytically and draft MECE

    One of the complications of the drafting principle to be accurate is a drafters tendency to be

    exhaustive or to ascertain that the concept is well covered. An important guideline for improving your

    accuracy (and accordingly your confidence that you did a good job) is to think analytically and draft, in

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    McKinsey's terminology5, 'MECE' (mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive) or, in French

    philosophical terms, 'cartesianic'.

    MECE and cartesianic mean that, consistent with the ideas of Descartes, the drafter cuts the greater

    contractual concepts into understandable pieces in respect of which he or she is convinced that those

    pieces are allthe pieces, because they leave no gaps and do not overlap.

    McKinseys principle to be MECE. The two related concepts of 'mutually exclusive, collectively

    exhaustive' can be explained as follows: a description of acts or events is 'collectively exhaustive' if no

    other act or event is conceivable. In contract drafting terms it means that describing a course of action

    is collectively exhaustive if all variants are caught (under the addressed conditions or circumstances).

    When you roll a dice, it will inevitable show a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 and they capture all possible outcomes

    exhaustively. 'Mutually exclusive' are subject matters that exclude each other without any overlap. If

    you throw a coin, you can rest assured that the outcome is either heads or tails (yes, if you throw it in

    on the beach it might show the edge, which is why arguably the edge makes heads and tails

    collectively exhaustive, but still is mutually exclusive).

    Descartes. The MECE-principle was probably identified by the 17th century philosopher and

    mathematician Ren Descartes. In his Discours de la mthode, and more elaborately in his Regulae

    ad directionem ingenii(i.e. rules on the direction of the mind), he restated a few principles to deduct,

    on the basis of a hypothesis, an explanation or description of any investigated problem. Traditionally,

    the French PhD-doctorate books are set up according to Descartes' method. Descartes proposed that:

    "if we are to understand a problem perfectly, we must free it from any superfluous conceptions, reduce it tothe simplest terms, and by a process of enumeration, split it up into the smallest possible parts."

    Drafting technique. Now, let's translate this into contract drafting. A draftsperson often deals with the

    question how to address a subject of discussion (or agreement) in such manner that the future will not

    show lacunas or reveal an interpretation that had not been put into the words by the parties. The task

    of a drafter is therefore to think analytically, to create a systematic structure, and to write logically. To

    identify the smallest possible parts, the drafter may revert to concepts such as:

    substance vs. procedure

    objective elements vs. subjective elements

    content vs. form

    cause vs. effects

    a concept vs. manifestations of the concept

    (chrono-) logical sequence: before and after delivery/closing

    By converting these concepts into the case at hand, a drafter may establish a belief that the entire

    subject is captured into the contract.

    5 The MECE-principle (pronounce MEESEE, like in see me) is addressed in two bestsellers of Ethan Rasiel(McKinsey). Ethan M. Rasiel, The McKinsey way, McGraw-Hill 1999; and Ethan M. Rasiel and Paul N. Friga, TheMcKinsey mind, McGraw-Hill 2002 (both are translated into several languages).

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    (b) Examples of improved accuracy

    Example 1 Service Agreement. An example of improving the accuracy can be found in a contract

    for services. In such a contract, a drafter will probably address how and when delivery and acceptance

    of the service takes place. Applicable statutes typically provide that any shortcomings must be claimed

    within a reasonable period of time or without undue delay and that a claim assessment also takes

    into account the rules of the particular marketplace. It may help to investigate how such deadlines

    actually operate in the given context and provide for customised (i.e. precise) timeframes. A contract

    attempting to fill in the vagueness of such statutory provisions should align with the wording of the

    statutory provisions accurately, and deviate from them precisely. Likewise, such deviation is easier to

    accept by the other party. Also, if the deviation is at first sight incompatible with mandatory law, being

    precise may well justify the settlement of an uncertain element of such mandatory provision.

    Example 2 SPA price adjustment. A similar example can be found in share purchase agreements

    with a price adjustment mechanism. Typically, such mechanisms provide for strict timeframes within

    which a party must deliver (or respond to delivered) financial accounts. If the preparation is no more

    than the push of a button, a short period may well suit both parties interests, but if the work is much

    more complicated than producing quarterly or annual results (e.g. because the cut-off date is

    potentially a random day of the month), a longer period of time seems to be inevitable. Such informed

    proposal is easy to explain and probably very acceptable (and if the other party bluntly responds with

    a doubled or halved timeframe that may well be countered). The period desirable for reviewing

    financial statements delivered to a purchaser, on the other hand, requires that the purchaser becomes

    acquainted with the applied accounting principles, the way they are adopted in reality, as well as the

    reported facts and valuation assessments actually being true and accurate.

    Example 3milestoned procedure not results. For another example, if the contracting parties are

    unable to completely describe the desired end-result (content), they may define milestones

    (procedure) ascertaining that certain procedural steps will be taken in a pre-described manner, as

    this would enable each party to intervene at appropriate times and places. The quality of an end-result

    will certainly improve if the parties have established (and adhered to) a procedure ascertaining

    adequate evaluation. If contract parties are unable to foresee all possible events of default or all

    circumstances in which very considerable damages may occur, it would probably be more appropriate

    to provide for notification procedures and subsequent obligations to cooperate, than to say that in case

    of Events A, B or C, the seller will indemnify the purchaser. The latter manifestations will frequently

    trigger liability-avoiding behaviour (often including passivity and hence even greater damages).

    1.3 Consistency

    Rather than being a novelist, a contract drafter must be consistent. A variety in wording to express the

    same concept is a source of ambiguity (or even a starting point to seek a favourable interpretation of

    words) and in any case confusing. Examples of concepts that are sometimes used inconsistently:

    modify, adjust, amend, change

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    rules, regulations, laws, statutes

    clause, article, section, subsection, paragraph, item

    goods, product, equipment, tooling

    end-result, deliverable, milestone

    Order of words. Once a certain sequence is adopted, use it consistently (so avoid using both Seller

    and Purchaserand Purchaser and Seller in one document). If you started to refer to its Subsidiaries,

    do not also refer to Subsidiary of it.

    Applying the same notions consistently within a given transaction makes contract negotiations easier

    for both parties. This is also because once aggravating inconsistencies are discovered the reader will

    be suspicious about any other yet unidentified inconsistency. This does not facilitate contract review

    and negotiations.

    Consistent repetition. A drafter should ensure that there is consistent usage when drafting a

    contract. For example, if you repeatedly refer to a course of related actions, apply the enumeration or

    natural order for such actions rigorously throughout the contract. You should preferably use the

    enumeration or natural order in which they appear or occur in practice. Do not tinker with a natural

    order or sequence of actions used elsewhere in the contract for no reason.

    Consistent definitions. Definitions are an important tool to improve consistency throughout a

    contract or throughout transaction documents. Lawyers often use different terminology to point at the

    same concepts: the Buyer (alternative: Purchaser), Affiliates (Affiliated Companies or group

    companies), Parties (the parties hereto), of this Agreement (hereof). It happens too often that acontract includes both terminologies as a consequence of copy-paste drafting. To avoid this, differing

    definitions used throughout an organisation for the same defined terms should be made consistent.

    Tuning the defined terms used in all model contracts, should be part of contract upgrading work.

    Clauses and real life. Consistency should not only exist within a contractual framework but also

    between the contract and its reality: the actual performance under a contract should be consistent with

    what was agreed (or better) and vice versa. This means that contract provisions need to be consistent

    with how a debtor or creditor, or the industry or business environment in which they perform, actually

    operates.

    More burdensome are differing standards of conduct required by one-sided provisions used as modelcontracts. For example, do all definitions ofConfidential Informationstrictly require that:

    disclosed written information is marked confidential or proprietary (and oral information

    summarised in writing and identified as confidential within 30 days after its presentation)

    or do you also define Confidential Information to cover:

    disclosed information, which must reasonably be deemed to be confidential?

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    Any such definition should not contradict the general discipline of your own employees. Also, merely

    changing the provisions of a model confidentiality agreement will not drive organisational discipline

    into marking documents as confidential. On the other hand, using both definitions can be appropriate

    depending on the context. If you do choose to work with both, think first: there may well be a good

    reason to require the above discipline in a patent department whereas it might be completely obsolete

    for a sales department. Your contracting policy should be consistent with real life.

    A similar example of inconsistency: many divestment transactions include post-closing business

    relationships with a mutual element. In such case, the mutual delivery of services (or products) will

    probably be dealt with in different contracts. Ensure that you apply one payment term consistently for

    both parties: very few people acknowledge the reasonableness of agreeing on a short payment term

    for one party and a long payment term for the opposite party.

    Readability and consistency. In herA writers reference6, Diana Hacker recommends that when two

    or more concepts are parallel, they are easier to grasp (and remember) if they are expressed in

    parallel grammatical form. A single word should be balanced by single words, phrases by phrases and

    clauses by clauses. It basically means that by summing up those concepts, the same grammatical

    structure should be repeated consistently. For example:

    Open Source Licence Terms means the provisions in any licence for software, which require,

    as a condition of use, modification or distribution of any part of such software (a Work): (a) the

    making available of source code or design information regarding the Work; (b) the granting of

    permission for creating derivative works regarding the Work; or (c) the granting of a royalty-free

    licence to any party under intellectual property rights regarding the Work.Open Source Licence Terms include: (a) the GNU General Public Licence (GPL) or

    Lesser/Library GPL (LGPL), (b) the Artistic Licence (e.g. PERL), (c) the Mozilla Public Licence,

    (d) the Common Public Licence, (e) the Sun Community Source Licence (SCSL), (f) the Sun

    Industry Standards Source Licence (SISSL), (g) the Sun Industry Standards Licence (SISL),

    and (h) the Open Software Licence.

    In case of claims related to a defect in the Software, Licencee shall ; in case of claims related

    to an infringement of intellectual property rights, Licencee shall; in case of claims related to

    the Hardware, Licencee shall

    On the Closing Date, each indicated person shall take the action as follows:

    (a) Acquired Companies to enter into the Transitional Services Agreement with Seller;

    (b) Purchasers to pay to Seller the Purchase Price;

    (c) the Parties to execute the Deed of Transfer and to execute the Deed of Pledge, in each

    case in the presence of the Public Notary;

    (d) the Public Notary to register each Purchaser in the shareholders register of Acquired

    Companies as the holders of the Shares;

    6 Diana Hacker,A writers reference, Bedford/St. Martins, Boston/New York, 6th ed. 2009, S1.

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    (e) Purchasers to hand over letters of resignation as members of the management bodies of

    companies ofSellers Affiliates in Spain; and

    (f) Seller to hand over letters of resignation for each of its appointed members of the

    management bodies of companies of theAcquired Companies Affiliates outside Spain.

    Diana Hacker obviously gives some other examples, which include the consistent use (or consistent

    non-use) of adjectives in enumerations.

    Mark-ups and negotiations. Inconsistencies often arise when a provision is drafted and redrafted

    during the negotiation process. Do not refrain from reinstating consistency in a subsequent mark-up,

    even in sensitive provisions, as long as you do so consistently (and accurately). An example of this is

    a provision with several exceptions, qualifications or conditions. Particularly if they are added at

    different stages in the drafting process, they may not be expressed in a consistent or grammatical

    fashion. For example:

    Borrower may not incur or permit to subsist any Encumbrances on any of its assets, other than:

    (a) Encumbrances arising in the ordinary course of business;

    (b) Borrower may grant Encumbrances on equipment to secure indebtedness incurred to

    finance the purchase price of such equipment; and

    (c) Encumbrances described in Schedule 3 shall be permitted.

    The approaches reflected in the three exceptions are each correct. Nevertheless, each item reflects

    an approach inconsistent with the others, making the provision more difficult to follow. In the example,the approach reflected in item (a) is preferable, because it prevents unnecessary repetition with the

    lead-in provision.

    1.4 Vagueness and ambiguity

    This paragraph discusses two aspects of contract drafting that are not of a drafting- or language-

    technical nature but nevertheless very important: the use of vague terms and ambiguity. They are

    probably the source of most contract interpretation disputes.

    (a) Avoid vague terms

    Rule and exception. The title of this paragraph avoid vague terms Is a best practice rule with

    important exceptions. As a general principle, vagueness should be avoided, but many vague terms

    serve a useful purpose. As a general principle, a contract should be clear about the obligations of

    each party. However, clear obligations are not always agreeable. In such case, the principals may well

    work on the basis of a gentlemens agreement reflected by some vague wording of intention,

    materiality or reasonableness. Remember, however, that if an obligation is not clear, the strongest

    contracting party will have the benefit of the doubt as to whether it did perform duly.

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    Although contracts should be clear, many obligations are incapable of being defined in an all-

    embracing manner. For example, precise criteria may depend on extraneous uncertainties or the

    parties may be willing to assume clear (and even stricter) criteria only after a minimum level of mutual

    trust has been established. In such cases, it would be inevitable to use a vague term. It makes sense

    to elaborate on such vague terms by agreeing on conditions or milestones to achieve certainty at a

    later time and place.

    Examples of vague or unspecified contract terms are the concepts of reasonable, undue delay,

    material, substantiallyand properly. It is probable that the concept ofgood faithis also such a vague

    term. Essentially, it introduces a standard of conduct which has yet to be defined, and reflects a call

    for good-housekeeping-behaviour-but-not-too-much. I disagree with this. Good faith is a subjective

    state of mind requiring due and sincere consideration.

    Cultural difference. Generally, lawyers from jurisdictions with systematic codifications of the laws of

    obligations feel much more comfortable with vagueness than those from a common law jurisdiction.

    This may be explained by the fact that, by definition, codifications are built on vague terms that acquire

    their purpose in real life. Statutory references to materiality and reasonableness impose a balance of

    interests as well as a duty to explain. Similarly, in common law jurisdictions the individual freedom

    (and accordingly, the freedom of contract) may well prevail over vague (limiting) concepts such as

    good faith and fair dealing.

    Several vague terms are used in various typical contexts, but not always accurately. In the printed

    book Drafting contracts7, several aspects of the use of the terms reasonable, material, substantially

    and without undue delaywill be discussed.

    (b) Ambiguity

    Principle. A contract drafter should at all times avoid creating ambiguity.

    Almost every contract contains ambiguities if only as a consequence of the trade off against the other

    drafting principles of being concise, using plain language and writing short sentences. This is a

    paradox because ambiguity is often the result of a drafters attempt to accurately capture all

    circumstances and exceptions potentially applicable in the context. Nevertheless, if it is clear that the

    scope of a provision does not cover a particular fact or event, it is counterproductive to include anexception. Including the exception permits an argument to be made that the scope of the provision is

    really intended to be broader than it appears; otherwise why would the exception be included?

    Grouping exceptions. An inconsistent use of exceptions, limitations and qualifications in one

    sentence may create ambiguity. For example:

    7 Willem J.H. Wiggers, Drafting contracts, Techniques, best practice rules and recommendations related to contractdrafting, forthcoming (Spring/Summer 2011).

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    Except as X , Seller shall not increase the salaries of any employee (other than Y) above

    the levels in effect on the Signing Date, provided that increases may be made when Z

    The sentence consists of three positions where exceptions are created. In the case of short

    exceptions, it will read much better if they are placed at the beginning of the sentence. Conversely, if

    exceptions are voluminous, it is better to place the main point of the covenant (i.e. that Seller shall not

    increase salaries) at the beginning and all the exceptions are consistently placed together in a series

    at the end or in a separate sentence:

    Seller shall not increase the salaries of any employee above the levels in effect on the Signing

    Date, except that Seller may (a) X , (b) increase the salary of Y, and (c) provide for

    increases when Z

    Visual enumeration. If the series is subdivided into enumerated subparagraphs, it would also be

    possible to create exceptions on exceptions (as would often be necessary, but create an additional

    source of ambiguity).

    Sub-enumeration. When enumerations result in page-crossing lists of items, it may well be advisable

    to sub-enumerate the list. A typical example of such list can be found in share purchase agreements

    (where between the effective date and completion of the transaction, a number of actions would not be

    permitted without the prior approval of the purchaser), or in joint venture agreements (listing the items

    that are subject to approval by the joint venture partners or a supervisory body). Business people who

    are supposed to work with such list feel uncomfortable as to whether all relevant matters are indeed

    listed or whether a desired action is subject to approval. Instead of one list of 25 to 30 items, it may berecommendable to subdivide the list into several topical sub-lists (e.g. operational matters, IP-related

    resolutions, financial and tax matters, corporate structure-related decisions, employment and pension

    related matters and miscellaneous topics).

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    About Weagree:

    Weagree offers various services to accelerate contract drafting:

    Contract assembly. Our most eye-catching service is the Weagree Wizard, an extremely

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    Contract drafting principles. On the Weagree website, we publish about an abundance of

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    Weagree contact:

    +31 (0)20 616 9696 (t)+31 (0)6 461 555 08 (m)

    [email protected] (Willem Wiggers)

    Copyright Weagree 2011. Courtesy reprint of a part of Willem J.H. Wiggers, Drafting contracts, Techniques, bestpractice rules and recommendations related to contract drafting, (forthcoming Spring 2011).

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]