Representation: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
no edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{representationdescription}}
{{representationdescription}}
 
Representations are generally not made as to matters of law or legal status — those things are called [[legal opinion]]s and you’ll require [[Mediocre lawyer|august counsel]] to give you one of those<ref>First spending thirty of its onionskin pages, and several thousand of your pounds sterling, clearing its throat about what it is ''not'' saying before it will (ahem) [[give you one]].</ref><br>
Representations are generally also made about things which have already happened — “known knowns”, in the Rumsfeldian argot — and not states of affaiirs expected to come about in the future. A factual assertion about a future state of affairs is better known as a [[promise]], and you will need it to be a part of your contract, not a prelude to it, if you want to hold your counterparty to it in some tribunal down the line.
{{agent representations}}
{{agent representations}}


Navigation menu