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Everyone benefits but officers of Her Majesty's — or (''cough'') the People’s — courts. | Everyone benefits but officers of Her Majesty's — or (''cough'') the People’s — courts. | ||
“[[In good faith and a commercially reasonable manner]]” cuts the crap and promises to unlock some negotiations and take the [[tedious]] line-by-line muck-raking out of others. It may help persuade | “[[In good faith and a commercially reasonable manner]]” cuts the crap and promises to unlock some negotiations and take the [[tedious]] line-by-line muck-raking out of others. | ||
There is a certain kind of legal negotiator apt to see phantoms and ghosts at every turn. He has a bleak vision indeed of a counterparty’s general commercial aspirations for his organisation. | |||
“What if,” he will say, “your traders mendaciously use this clause to bring about my firm’s misfortune in a way I – er – cannot now anticipate?” (This fellow’s imagination tend to be fantastical in the abstract, but rather prosaic in the particular). | |||
Such a chap is often placated by the magical expression “acting in good faith and a commercially reasonable manner”. It may help persuade hime across that wobbly bridge to [[Consensus ad idem|consensus]]. Many a time it has helped the [[JC]] get home in time for supper. | |||
'''Litigation risk''': The one argument against the general principle is that it is inherently vague and therefore a source of potential dispute ''in itself'', ''even if'' we always exercise our rights reasonably and in good faith. But come now — it only presents [[litigation]] risk to clients who don’t trust you — and here you have bigger problems, frankly — or for those whom ''you'' don’t trust — also not without issues. Here, your problem is not the good faith obligation; it’s that you have a lousy client relationship. It hardly affects litigation risk in any case: An unhappy client will take action either way, and will argue a lack of good faith in any case. | '''Litigation risk''': The one argument against the general principle is that it is inherently vague and therefore a source of potential dispute ''in itself'', ''even if'' we always exercise our rights reasonably and in good faith. But come now — it only presents [[litigation]] risk to clients who don’t trust you — and here you have bigger problems, frankly — or for those whom ''you'' don’t trust — also not without issues. Here, your problem is not the good faith obligation; it’s that you have a lousy client relationship. It hardly affects litigation risk in any case: An unhappy client will take action either way, and will argue a lack of good faith in any case. |