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77 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 59 (2001-2002)
Why Contracts Are Written in Legalese

handle is hein.journals/chknt77 and id is 75 raw text is: WHY CONTRACTS ARE WRITTEN IN LEGALESE
CLAIRE A. HILL*
I. INTRODUCTION
Drafting and negotiating complex business contracts is difficult.
It requires prodigious memory capacity as well as imagination. How
does the lawyer know what the contract ought to cover besides the
bare promises to buy and sell or borrow and lend?'
Not surprisingly, lawyers have come up with a production pro-
cess by which each lawyer can access the accumulated wisdom of
many: the form. The form is typically not a form in the fill-in-the-
blanks sense; rather, it is an actual contract the lawyer or someone
she works with has used in one or more previous transactions.2
* Associate Professor of Law, Chicago-Kent College of Law. I wish to acknowledge
helpful comments by participants at the Canadian Law and Economics Association conference
in 1997, the Industrial Organization Workshop at the Washington University School of Law and
Department of Economics, and faculty workshops at the University of Wisconsin Law School,
Chicago-Kent College of Law, and the University of Maryland Law School. I also wish to
acknowledge helpful comments from Peg Brinig, Vik Khanna, Edward Lane-Reticker, Leandra
Lederman, Mark Lemley, and Stewart Macaulay.
1. Indeed, acquisition and financing agreements are the mainstays of large law firm
corporate practice.
2. In my experience, some law firms have aspired to, but never quite achieved, the goal of
having a firm-wide form. It's not as though the forms used within a firm, or for that matter, by
different firms, differ enormously in content; they do, however, look quite a bit different. The
provisions might be phrased differently or be in a different order. There might be different
drafting conventions as to the defined terms, always an important aspect of agreements. And
there are many other matters of this sort; again, the documents do more or less the same
things but cannot really be said to be the same form. There are a few industry-wide forms.
The two most prominent such forms are a model indenture published by the American Bar
Foundation, and the form for swap transactions. Both forms reflect regulatory and institutional
conditions not generally present in the everyday world of mergers and acquisitions and
financing agreements. Much of an indenture's content is dictated by statute, and/or details how
nonadversarial, mechanical duties (such as issuing notes to replace lost or stolen notes) are to be
performed. As to swaps, there is a fill-in-the-blanks form, developed by the International
Association of Swap Dealers, a trade association. The individually negotiated terms are
contained in an annex. Documentation plays a much different role in swap transactions than it
does in acquisition or financing transactions: indeed, the swap documentation is often not
completed until a month after the transaction has occurred. Furthermore, many, and perhaps
most, terms of a swap are virtually incomprehensible to lawyers; if lawyers are to be involved at
all in the transactions, which they typically are only if the swap is part of another transaction
involving more legal structuring, a form, developed by finance professionals who understand
swaps, is needed. Also, some lenders have fill-in-the-blanks forms for loans they will make. In
my experience, these forms suffer many of the same defects as the actual contracts used as

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