Taking Information Seriously: Misrepresentation and Nondisclosure in Contract Law and Elsewhere

Article — Volume 92, Issue 4

92 Va. L. Rev. 565
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Contract law attempts in various ways to regulate the information that contracting parties exchange. However, most contract law doctrines (and most contract law scholars) have yet to come to grips with the practical issues involved in regulating information. For instance, the disclosure of information can produce costs as well as benefits, by distracting parties from other, more important information; so it is often hard to decide which information should have been disclosed in any given case. Similar costs and benefits are often involved even in cases involving false statements (misrepresentations), where liability might seem less controversial.

While these issues are underappreciated in contract law, they are much more familiar in federal consumer protection law, especially in cases involving false advertising; and they are beginning to be recognized in products liability cases involving the duty to warn. This Article suggests various ways to improve contract law’s handling of misrepresentation and nondisclosure, all of which involve closer attention to the relevant costs and benefits.

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  Volume 92 / Issue 4  

Taking Information Seriously: Misrepresentation and Nondisclosure in Contract Law and Elsewhere

By Richard Craswell
92 Va. L. Rev. 565

Justiciability and Remedies–And Their Connections to Substantive Rights

By Richard H. Fallon
92 Va. L. Rev. 633

Deforming the Federal Rules: An Essay on What’s Wrong with the Recent Erie Decision

By Earl C. Dudley, Jr. and George Rutherglen
92 Va. L. Rev. 707

Solving the Extraterritoriality Problem: Lessons from the Honest Services Statute

By Pamela Bookman
92 Va. L. Rev. 749