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Such profligacy in the chambers of parsimonious [[Mediocre lawyer|advocacy]] must come as a surprise — seeing as the founding principle of a {{tag|contract}} is whomsoever the law has joined together in contract can, by the same mechanism, vary it, so such a statement can do no more than state the weft and warp of commerce — that is to say the [[bleeding obvious]] — but all too often it flows from the biro of one who, by {{sex|her}} very qualification, is [[deemed]] to know better. | Such profligacy in the chambers of parsimonious [[Mediocre lawyer|advocacy]] must come as a surprise — seeing as the founding principle of a {{tag|contract}} is whomsoever the law has joined together in contract can, by the same mechanism, vary it, so such a statement can do no more than state the weft and warp of commerce — that is to say the [[bleeding obvious]] — but all too often it flows from the biro of one who, by {{sex|her}} very qualification, is [[deemed]] to know better. | ||
{{seealso}} | |||
*[[The parties hereby agree]]... and, worse still: | |||
*[[The parties hereby acknowledge]]... | |||
{{plainenglish}} | {{plainenglish}} |
Revision as of 13:38, 5 October 2017
A counterfactual that should, but all too often does not, go without saying.
Such profligacy in the chambers of parsimonious advocacy must come as a surprise — seeing as the founding principle of a contract is whomsoever the law has joined together in contract can, by the same mechanism, vary it, so such a statement can do no more than state the weft and warp of commerce — that is to say the bleeding obvious — but all too often it flows from the biro of one who, by her very qualification, is deemed to know better.
See also
- The parties hereby agree... and, worse still:
- The parties hereby acknowledge...
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