For Finance Industry, a Possible Alternative to the Deregulation-Bust-Bailout-Reregulation Cycle

No one wants a replay of the financial meltdown of the past couple years, but can new regulations really provide a long-term solution?  Periods of heightened regulatory oversight seem inevitably followed by periods of deregulation, while the prospect of government bailouts may create a moral hazard that promotes excessive risk-taking.  Thus, in an interesting new article on SSRN, Shelley Smith suggests an alternative response that does not involve government regulatory agencies.  Her proposal instead focuses on the courts and reform of the law of adhesion contracts — those take-it-or-leave-it agreements that consumers routinely sign without reading or understanding.

Shelley argues that contracts of adhesion played an important role in creating the subprime mortgage mess, as consumers took on ruinous financial obligations without fully understanding the terms of the deals.  She suggests that courts should create stronger incentives for the drafters of contracts of adhesion to make the key terms comprehensible to ordinary consumers.  Thus, she would relax the normal presumption that the terms of the written contract will be strictly enforced where there is reason to doubt whether a reasonable person would have read and understood those terms.  If the “reasonable person” test is not satisfied, and extrinsic evidence fails to establish that the consumer actually received notice of the disputed term, then the court would not enforce the term as written, but would instead treat the case as a “missing term” case.

The article, entitled “Reforming the Law of Adhesion Contracts: A Judicial Response to the Subprime Mortgage Crisis,” is forthcoming in the Lewis and Clark Law Review.  The abstract appears after the jump. 

Continue ReadingFor Finance Industry, a Possible Alternative to the Deregulation-Bust-Bailout-Reregulation Cycle

New Issue of Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review Is Here

On behalf of the staff of the Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review, I am pleased to announce the arrival of the first issue of volume fourteen, available now in print and online.

This issue highlights the work of several scholars.  Dr. Dana Beldiman, a partner with the law firm of Carroll, Burdick & McDonough LLP in San Francisco, examines of the concept of originality within the context of the “knowledge based economy” in her article, “Utilitarian Information Works — Is Originality the Proper Lens?” 

Jay Dratler, Jr., Goodyear Professor of Intellectual Property at the University of Akron School of Law, offers an insightful revision of patent law in “Fixing Our Broken Patent System.” In this article, Professor Dratler incorporates never-before-codified principles of judge-made law into an improved statutory scheme that recognizes invention as a commercial and economic process, discourages patents on abstract research, and places the focus of patent law on practical economic and commercial criteria.

This issue also continues our Emerging Scholars Series with an article by César Ramirez-Montes, intellectual property lecturer at the University of Leeds, U.K. 

Continue ReadingNew Issue of Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review Is Here

Did You Know That to Many, “America” Is Not the Name of Our Nation?

Rio_group_countriesIt’s the name of a whole continent.  Indeed, as with so many minor controversies today, there is a Facebook group for that.

There is a legal angle here, and I am getting to it.  A couple of weeks ago, twenty-five Latin American and Caribbean states met to discuss the formation of a new regional organization.  The idea is not entirely new, as the Rio Group of Latin American and Caribbean states has been around for more than 20 years.  But at this meeting the member states seem to have reached an agreement to form an official alternative to the Organization of American States.

Continue ReadingDid You Know That to Many, “America” Is Not the Name of Our Nation?