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Narrativising contract law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Abstract
Socio-legal scholarship in contract maintains that the classical law is ineffective in regulating commercial agreements, and that the law should be more attentive to the role played by relational norms of cooperation and implicit understandings in business dealings. This paper explores the extent to which the parties' own narratives about their business relationship, as presented to a judge through testimony, can be both a source of information to judges about how business is conducted and a corrective to the classical contract law mindset, which favours the operation of individualist over cooperative norms in the resolution of commercial disputes. The paper examines a body of ‘law and narrative’ scholarship which underlines narrative's power to subvert traditional legal norms. It also considers some of the difficulties with relying on party narratives as evidence of the implicit dimensions of commercial agreements, but concludes that such narratives may have a role to play in the development of a more relationally constituted contract law and are thus worthy of closer scrutiny.
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References
1 I use relational contract theory here as a label to describe the socio-legal approach to contractual obligations generally, rather than to refer specifically to Ian Macneil's theory of exchange relationships.
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111 Above n 54, at [375].
112 Baird Textiles v Marks & Spencer, above n 3, provides an excellent example of this.
113 Above n 54, at [97].
114 Eg, that workouts should be underpinned by a spirit of cooperation is borne out by the non-binding INSOL Principles for a Global Approach to Multi-Creditor Workouts (published October 2000), available at http://www.insol.org/statement.htm. The fourth principle states that ‘the interests of relevant creditors are best served by [lenders] co-ordinating their response to a debtor in financial difficulty’. The seventh principles states that ‘Information obtained for the purposes of the process concerning the assets, liabilities and business of the debtor and any proposals for resolving its difficulties should be made available to all relevant creditors...’. See also, Armour and Deakin, above n 55.
115 Above n 67, at 211.
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127 Ibid, p 137.
128 NatWest v Rabobank, above n 54, at [112].
129 Ibid, at [101] and [113]. The economic underpinning of this argument – that the choice of formalism and non-disclosure involves a cost–benefit analysis – will not be examined here. On this see Craswell, R Taking information seriously: misrepresentation and nondisclosure in contract law and elsewhere’ (2006) 92 Virginia L Rev 565 Google Scholar at 569.
130 Charny, above n 122, at 408–409.
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132 Illustrated respectively in Blackpool and Fylde Aero Club v Blackpool Borough Council [1990] 3 All ER 25 and Williams v Roffey [1991] 1 QB 1.
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134 Above n 5, p 49.
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