Template:M intro design no-one reads this
Herculio: Ay, drafted, is ’t;
But to my mind, though my inner eagle is attuned
And to the manner born, this is a Condition
More honour’d in the breach than the observance.
This heavy-handed sheaf of windy guff
Doth impose a weighty tax upon our distant aspirations;
Thy clipping tickets with their malty turn of phrase
Soil our accord with oily additions. Who wouldst draw Not the heaving strokes of palpitating consensus
But a wicker frame of ghoulish aspect
Post-dated with the odds of curly misadventure?
Everyone has a contract until they get punched in the mouth
- —With apologies to Mike Tyson
JC, being given to making up social science on the hoof, is working on a theory that when we buy the services of a commercial law firm — and, specifically, when we buy them to make contracts for us — we are not buying words, nor even the underlying legal content that they express, but the general, beatific, peace of mind that comes from paying serious people to do sober things. You don’t need to understand their words or concepts, because they have done that for you and, by their simple presence, intimated — but to be clear, not told you in so many words — that everything will be okay.
This illusion lasts thereafter as long as no-one casts an analytical eye across the documents. The moment anyone does — and look: no one reads legal agreements for the hell of it, so assume such a person is being paid to pick holes — that illusion usually vanishes.
Important operators — words like “not” — will be inexplicably absent when needed and irritatingly there when not. Square brackets, blobs and placeholders will appear just where you dearly wish for certainty. Critical terms will be subject to non-existent subclauses. Carelessly-lobbed boilerplate will ram-raid painstakingly crafted rights.
And that is where the parties have had in mind the original deal. But life is rarely as mundane as that. Invariably, since execution, neither side will have paid the docs the blindest bit of attention. They may not know where they are or, if enough time has passed, even that there are any docs. Why would they? No one has insisted on, performed, or seemed advertent to those hotly argued covenants and termination rights. Agreed billing mechanisms and amendment procedures have been ignored. By their behaviour the parties may, quite consensually, have systematically contradicted key tenets of the contract, for years.
None of this matters in the slightest until the relationship hits the skids. Suddenly each side seeks legal advice, new counsel comb the contract, poring over minor details, and hunting for clinchers in a babbling, confused, inchoate hellscape of random words that it is now impossible, except by coincidence, to map to any coherent course of behaviour let alone the partiesʼ actual dealings with each other.
This is because they delegated this performative act to lab coated specialists with precious little grasp of the commercial basis at the start of the relationship who, not having been involved since, have absolutely zero now — who hardly can be blamed now for failing to predict how the relationship developed in the meantime.
Commissioning legal contracts in this way is to pay good money to buy (or, for all you know, sell) a lucky dip of random puts and calls that will only be revealed in case of catastrophe. Your best hope, therefore, is that the relationship continues to flourish, no catastrophe happens, and no one ever looks at the contract again.
Which begs the question: what are you paying for?
The ugly secret of professional practice is that the work product is mostly mediocre because, for the most part, it doesnʼt matter if it is not.
Ninety nine percent of contracts are never litigated. This is not because they are flawless. It is because their parties donʼt fall out.
The contract preparation process is, to its principals, a thing of sombre mystery. You are not even meant to understand the actual words they send you, and you may cause yourself trouble if you try. It is better just to take that generalised comfort that there are a lot of words, they seem somehow legally sonorous, strung together in carefully constructed, if forbiddingly unbroken, slabs, and the battalions of advisors who have gathered on either side of the banquet to pick them over will, by the time the bus boys are serving coffee and warming up the disco, understand it all.
All that skirmishing and sniping must, after all, do something — mustnʼt it? It must advance what the respective advisors take to be their clientsʼ interests, however imperfectly they understand them.
The same way trenches and battle fronts thrust and counterthrust, the lines move back and forth. Since the people who wrangle these textual monoliths are part of an educated elite, a kind of emergent wisdom settles upon the project. Its net effect — even if you cannot fathom how or why — will be a comforting conviction that everything will generally be okay.
But what if this assumption was — wrong?
To be clear, the question is not merely “I wonder whether people buy Big Law to cover their backsides?”
Of course they do. Everyone knows that.
I was getting at the fact that the Big Law work product, when you do read it, is dismal. This is because *it is not designed to be read*.
It is designed to just occupy space. It is like that expanding polystyrene stuff they spray inside internal partition walls for soundproofing.
There is just no craft, no elegance, no design, no architectural panache, no basic economy. It is just this tortured, brutalised, monstrous torrent of dreck, from end to end.
These people are meant to be wizards of language, after all. They should deliver the most beautiful, clear, elegant product.
That they don’t is a kind of final triumph of form over substance.