Waiver: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{g}}A topic that can give a [[common law]]yer hives and an under-confident [[credit officer]] an entire psychiatric episode.  
{{a|boilerplate|
[[File:Wafer.png|450px|thumb|center|Don’t worry about it mate.]]
}}A topic that can give a [[common law]]yer hives and an under-confident [[credit officer]] an entire psychiatric episode.  


Our legal friends are liable to spout much paranoid nonsense about [[waiver]]s — some of it will trampling upon the very founding principles of the law they learned at their first-year {{tag|contract}} law tutor’s breast — if the proposition is advanced that “we have a right, but we didn’t use it, and now we might have lost it”.  
Our legal friends are liable to spout much paranoid nonsense about [[waiver]]s — some of it will trampling upon the very founding principles of the law they learned at their first-year {{tag|contract}} law tutor’s breast — if the proposition is advanced that “we have a right, but we didn’t use it, and now we might have lost it”.  

Revision as of 10:18, 29 April 2020

Boilerplate Anatomy™
Don’t worry about it mate.


Comments? Questions? Suggestions? Requests? Insults? We’d love to 📧 hear from you.
Sign up for our newsletter.

A topic that can give a common lawyer hives and an under-confident credit officer an entire psychiatric episode.

Our legal friends are liable to spout much paranoid nonsense about waivers — some of it will trampling upon the very founding principles of the law they learned at their first-year contract law tutor’s breast — if the proposition is advanced that “we have a right, but we didn’t use it, and now we might have lost it”.

Lost it? Forever? Can a contractual right, unexercised, really just evaporate from the page while counsel wring their hands, like so much dew in the morning sun, or that alcoholic gel you find in the public conveniences of officious yet parsimonious organisations?

Your contractual rights are a not quite that ephemeral. You don’t lose them just because you don’t exercise them.

There are two kinds of waiver: waiver by election and waiver by estoppel.

See also