Exemption Clauses in Contracts: Historical and Comparative Law Analysis
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Date
2005
Authors
Journal Title
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1689-8052
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Volume Title
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Publisher
Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM
Abstract
"In general, exemption clauses are stipulations according to which one or both
parties to a contract will not be liable in the case of breach1 of one or more
of its (their) obligations. These clauses are also known as exculpatory, exoneration,
limitation, or exclusion clauses. In the present paper I will use these
words interchangeably. Exemption clauses aim to modify the rules of liability
otherwise applicable in the case of breach, placing the obligor in a better position.
The doctrine of freedom of contract (and the related doctrine of autonomy
of will) is considered to be a fundamental principle of the law of contracts.2
Autonomy of will is, in addition, a justification of the presence of exemption
clauses in contracts. But also in this field of the law of contracts a considerable
movement towards the limitation of contractual freedom can be seen."(...)
Description
Keywords
historia prawa, The doctrine of freedom of contract, The French Civil Code, The German Civil Code, The law in England
Citation
Studia Prawnicze. Rozprawy i materiały 2005, nr 1, s. 157-168.