Carefully Read Standard Form Business Contracts

February 23, 2010
By Steven Peck on February 23, 2010 6:46 AM |

A standard form contract (sometimes referred to as an adhesion contract or boilerplate contract) is a contract between two parties that does not allow for negotiation, i.e. take it or leave it. It is often a contract that is entered into between unequal bargaining partners, such as when an individual is given a contract by the salesperson of a multinational corporation. The customer in no position to negotiate the standard terms of such contracts and the company's representative often does not have the autonomy to do so. While adhesion contracts, in and of themselves, are not illegal per se, there exists a very real possibility for unconscionability says California Business Lawyer Steven C. Peck.

Standard form contracts are rarely read
Lengthy boilerplate terms are often in fine print and written in complicated legal language which often seems irrelevant. The prospect of a buyer finding any useful information from reading such terms is correspondingly low. Even if such information is discovered, the consumer is in no position to bargain as the contract is presented on a "take it or leave it" basis. Coupled with the often large amount of time needed to read the terms, the expected payoff from reading the contract is low and few people would be expected to read it. Sometimes a standard form contract may literally be dispensed from a vending machine to drivers sitting in line to enter a parking garage, which means that stopping to read the contract risks provoking road rage.
Access to the full terms may be difficult or impossible before acceptance
Often the document being signed is not the full contract; the purchaser is told that the rest of the terms are in another location. This reduces the likelihood of the terms being read and in some situations, such as software license agreements, can only be read after they have been notionally accepted by purchasing the good and opening the box. These contracts are typically not enforced, since common law dictates that all terms of a contract must be disclosed before the contract is executed.

Contact Steven Peck's Premier legal toll free at 1.866.999.9085 to talk to an experienced California Business Attorney and visit us on-line at www.premierlegal.org.