'Agreeing to Disagree': Filling Gaps in Deliberately Incomplete Contracts

40 Pages Posted: 9 Feb 2004 Last revised: 7 Dec 2017

See all articles by Omri Ben-Shahar

Omri Ben-Shahar

University of Chicago Law School

Date Written: January 1, 2004

Abstract

This Article develops a new standard for gap filling in incomplete contracts. It focuses on an important class of situations in which parties leave their agreement deliberately incomplete, with the intent to further negotiate and resolve the remaining issues. In these situations, neither the traditional no-enforcement result nor the usual gap filling approaches accord with the parties' partial consent. Instead, the Article develops the concept of pro-defendant gap-fillers, under which each party is granted an option to enforce the transaction supplemented with terms most favorable (within reason) to the other party. A deliberately incomplete contract with pro-defendant gap fillers transforms into two complete contracts, each favorable to a different party, with each party entitled to enforce only the contract favorable to her opponent. Under this approach, partial consent gives rise to a correspondingly intermediate burden of liability. The Article demonstrates that this regime promotes the interests of negotiating parties who enter agreements-to-agree. It also identifies various doctrinal practices that already incorporate the pro-defendant gap filling logic.

Suggested Citation

Ben-Shahar, Omri, 'Agreeing to Disagree': Filling Gaps in Deliberately Incomplete Contracts (January 1, 2004). Michigan Law and Economics Research Paper No. 04-002, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=496183 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.496183

Omri Ben-Shahar (Contact Author)

University of Chicago Law School ( email )

1111 E. 60th St.
Chicago, IL 60637
United States

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