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Official Blog of the AALS Section on Contracts

Friday Frivolity: The Unalloyed Joy of Having One’s Priors Confirmed!!!

November 29, 2024

Bayern ShawnLast year, I was vexed to have been characterized as a “proponent of tested contract language” by one of the leading advocates for the “plain language” movement in contracts drafting. I objected to my characterization because, while I have nothing against clear drafting, I don’t think complexity in language is the biggest problem that we face in contracts drafting, and I don’t think plain language does anything to alleviate the major problems. I reviewed the terms and conditions of the blog on which I was pilloried, and I noted that they amounted to ten clearly-worded pages, including links to the privacy policies of there “trusted partners.” The terms also provided that they could be changed with or without notice. I commented that if a reader got through all ten pages of the policy, they would likely conclude that “ease of understanding the contract’s language is not its biggest problem.”

Screenshot 2024-11-19 at 9.34.37 AMShawn Bayern (right) recently posted on JOTWELL his review of recent draft article by Yonathan Arbel (left), ​ The Readability of Contracts: Big Data Analysis, 21 J. Empirical Legal Stud. __ (forthcoming, 2024), available on  SSRN. You should read Shawn’s review and Yonathan’s work. But I am struck by his conclusion (at least in the draft), which Shawn cites in his review: 

[T]he resources devoted to simplifying contract language could have been directed towards addressing more fundamental issues in consumer markets, such as improving market competition to give consumers more meaningful choices; addressing information asymmetries through targeted disclosure requirements; strengthening enforcement mechanisms against unfair or deceptive practices; or removing regulatory barriers to entry to markets. 

I am grateful to Yonathan for his work, elevating my priors, which were based on anecdote and hence might be dismissed as unwarranted, to the level of empirically-justified social scientific conclusions.