CONTRACTING OUT OF PUBLIC LAW

In contract law, standard interpretive doctrine instructs courts to give effect to the intentions of the parties. Efficiency is promoted, we are told, by reducing state intervention into autonomous private decision-making, particularly when contracting parties are sophisticated corporate entities th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Harvard journal on legislation 2018-01, Vol.55 (2), p.325
1. Verfasser: Moon, William J
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description In contract law, standard interpretive doctrine instructs courts to give effect to the intentions of the parties. Efficiency is promoted, we are told, by reducing state intervention into autonomous private decision-making, particularly when contracting parties are sophisticated corporate entities that can presumably bargain for their interests. Enabled by rules adopted over the past several decades expanding the freedom to contract, private entities increasingly control every aspect of their engagement, including the substantive and procedural law governing disputes that arise between contracting parties. Alarmingly, the growing number of commercial agreements that stipulate the application of law with little or no connection to the contracting parties systematically precludes private litigants from activating otherwise mandatory domestic regulatory statutes, including laws designed to deter securities fraud, commercial racketeering, and anti-competitive behavior. This trend is particularly problematic because both Congress and state legislatures frequently devise statutes that rely on private litigants to effectuate regulation aimed at protecting the workings of the market. Challenging the predominant scholarly account that has largely celebrated the enforcement of choice-of-law provisions from an efficiency standpoint, I argue that courts should police commercial agreements that seek an end-run around domestic regulatory law
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; HeinOnline Law Journal Library
subjects Courts
Decision making
Fraud
Government contracts
Law
Organized crime
Police
Rules
Securities
State court decisions
State intervention
State legislatures
Statutes
Trade agreements
title CONTRACTING OUT OF PUBLIC LAW
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