The Restatement of The Law of Contracts

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The document discusses the publication of the Restatement of the Law of Contracts by the American Law Institute and provides a critical analysis of its approach and suggestions for improving future restatements.

The main topic discussed is the Restatement of the Law of Contracts published by the American Law Institute and a critical analysis of its approach.

Some of the criticisms the author has are that the artificial formula of expression chosen by the Institute renders the restatements of less value than they could be and limits their ability to shape the law of the future. The author also criticizes the narrow scope of the restatements.

Yale Law School

Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository


Faculty Scholarship Series

Yale Law School Faculty Scholarship

1-1-1933

The Restatement of the Law of Contracts


Charles E. Clark
Yale Law School

Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/fss_papers


Part of the Law Commons
Recommended Citation
The Restatement of the Law of Contracts, 42 Yale Law Journal 643 (1933)

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YALE LAW JOURNAL


VOL. XLII

MARCH, 1933

No. 5

THE RESTATEMENT OF THE LAW OF CONTRACTS


CHARLES E. CLARKt

THE publication of the completed Restatement of the Law of Contracts makes officially available the first fruit of the gigantic project
to "clarify, unify and simplify our common law" undertaken ten
years ago by the leading figures of the American bar, organized in
a wholly unique and original manner into "The American Law Institute." Beautifully bound in red leather in two volumes of clear
type on a small page with 609 sections and 1129 pages, exclusive of
index and table of contents, and with a price appropriate to its
sumptuous setting, the "restatement" has been given every advantage which mechanical skill can afford. It appears with the
acclaim of bench and bar, an acclaim justified by the ambitious
nature of the project and the devoted labors which have gone into its
making. Its appearance is an important event in our law, deserving
of the most careful and intelligent appraisal of which the profession
is capable. The very magnitude of the project and the number and
professional standing of its protagonists do, however, tend to prevent such appraisal. One is tempted either to embalm it in words
of general and fulsome praise or to indulge in humor at the expense
of its more ponderous phases, depending upon one's previous emotional stimuli. In what follows I shall pay the endeavor the sincerest
compliment in my power by giving to it the best thought that is in
me. Particularly am I anxious to approach it in this spirit because
the first official volumes confirm a sincerely held opinion which I
have shared with others, that in spite of significant accomplishments
(of which the Chief Justice of the United States rightly selects as
the most important the collaboration of all members of the profession
in joint endeavor for law improvement)' the Institute, by reason of
tDean, Yale School of Law. President, Association of American Law Schools.
Adviser on Property, American Law Institute.
1. "No such cooperation has ever been known in the field of the common
law, and valuable as is this first fruition of this collaboration, the method which

[643]

YALE LAW JOURNAL

[Vol. 42

the narrow limits of an artificial formula of expression which it has


chosen to respect, is rendering its main product of less value than
its many important by-products and of less significance than its
careful fabrication deserves.
The American Law Institute is outstandingly important in its
ambitious objective, in its personnel and in the resources which it
has secured for research in law. Its objective is nothing less than
the restatement of our common law--"the most authoritative effort
in two thousand years to summarize and state existing legal principles." 2 In fact its original objectives were even broader and it
is to be hoped that they are still possibilities. Its charter states:
"The particular business and objects of the society are educational,
and are to promote the clarification and simplification of the law
and its better adaptation to social needs, to secure the better administration of justice, and to encourage and carry on scholarly and
scientific legal work." 3 Its personnel is skilfully chosen to unite
the bench, the bar and the law school world. With only rare exceptions, it has enlisted in its cause as either producers or consumers
the outstanding, the interested and the informed members of the
profession. The Reporters of its restatements are law school professors; judges, lawyers and professors constitute its Council and
the advisory groups on the various subjects (four members of its
,council have been appointed justices of the United States Supreme
Court) ; the chief justices of all the highest courts of the country,
-has made it possible holds, I think, even a higher promise of benefit than that
which will follow the immediate use of the Restatement. For this method not
only leads to a better understanding and mastery of the principles of law and
-thus aims at diminishing confusion and uncertainty in their application, but
it also points the way to success in dealing with a great variety of problems
.affecting the administration of justice. If we can get judges, members of
the bar, and those who are devoting their lives to the study of the law and
administration, to unite in a common endeavor to secure the most competent
judgment as to practicable measures to attain simplicity, directness and promptitude, we shall be able to discharge the special obligations which rest upon our
-profession." Chief Justice Hughes (1932) 18 A. B. A. J.775.
2. From "Radio Program of the American Bar Association" announcing
President Wickersham's address on May "7,1933, on "Restating the Law; an
Attempt at Simplification."
3. 1 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AmERicAN LAW INSTITUTE, Part II, 33 (1923).
'The report of the organizing Committee stated that there should be a Bureau of

Research connected with the Institute and also that it should undertake legal
Id. at
53, 55. The model Code of Criminal Procedure would fall in this general field;

,surveys with the object of better adapting the law to existing needs.

also the federal court study referred to in note 5, infra. Compare papers by
'Messrs. Oliphant and Llewellyn on The Relation of Current Economic and
.Social Problems to the Restatement of the Law (1923) 10 PROCEEDINGS OF TME
ACADEMY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

323, 331.

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

the presidents of all state bar associations, the deans of all the schools
which form the Association of American Law Schools and other
important legal officials and representatives of societies and groups
affiliated with the law are ex officio members while in addition there
are about 700 elected members. Its wholly unique success in uniting
professional and scientific personnel in one great endeavor is the
source of its greatest power but naturally tends to silence criticism.
At the same time it has secured donations adequate for its operation.
The Rockefeller Foundation has provided $147,000 for work in the
field of Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure, and the Carnegie
Corporation originally provided $1,075,000 for the work of restatement. This sum was exhausted at the end of 1931 and the Carnegie
Corporation is now appropriating $155,000 a year for the restatements.
It is a commonplace made more striking by the Twentieth Century
Fund's second annual survey of the grants by the 102 great American
research foundations that while medical and physical sciences have
been able to command extensive donations for their work, the social
sciences in general, and the law in particular, have obtained comparatively little financial support. 4 The New York World-Telegram
says editorially with reference to the facts revealed by this survey:
"Bold in blazing new paths in the physical sciences, the donors and
custodians of these funds appear timid and inadequate before social
maladjustments and economic wrongs." To what use has been placed
the first really substantial and still wholly unusual grant for legal
research?
In preparing this paper I have found myself troubled with the
dilemma of either an immoderate use of the personal pronoun or a
loss in directness of statement by employing the usual thinly veiled
grammatical inversions and evasions. Since I am aiming to be
direct I have chosen the former alternative deliberately. Moreover
I desire to avoid the possibility that my criticisms shall be taken as
other or more extensive, in spirit and in content, than they are. I
have done all in my power to further the objects of the Institute, as
Adviser on Property since 1926, in assisting in the organization of
the work on state annotations and in such other ways as I have found
possible.5 The collaboration with other law teachers and with lawyers
in study of legal problems I prize, and I freely admit that I have
4. AinRICAN FOUNDATIONS AND Taum
(1932).
5.

Fins,

TwENTIETH CENTUY FUND

Compare the study of the business of the federal courts, now being con-

ducted under the auspices of the Institute by a committee of which I am Chairman. A first report should be presented to the next meeting of the Institute.
See T. W. Arnold, Progress Report on Study of the Fcderal Courts, No. 7 (1931)

17 A. B. A. J.799, 802.

YALE LAW JOURNAL

[Vol. 42

received more in instruction in the fields of my interest than I have


given. Yet when I see my own group so often turn in impatience if
not disgust from the attempt to force a black letter sentence do what
it can never do-state pages of history and policy and honest study
and deliberation-and long for the freedom of expression which
scholars should have, I am confident that far from casting any reflection upon the restaters I am trying to give their labors the outlet
which they really deserve. Moreover, I should hesitate at pressing
a purely personal opinion did I not know that large numbers of the
workers themselves and certainly large numbers of law teachers if
not of lawyers recoil from the "restatement" straitjacket. My own
guess is that at least a majority share this feeling, but I know of
no way in which this can be ascertained short of frank discussion.
The particular problem I am considering has had little open consideration. It has been treated in a somewhat formal way in official
pronouncements, to which reference is made hereinafter, but these
lend support to the conclusion that it has not been canvassed with
thoroughness. General endorsement and approval of Institute objectives, of which there has naturally and properly been much, does
not reach this point. Hence the outspoken approach to the problem
at the last meeting of the Association of American Law Schools
(December, 1932) is both refreshing and wholesome.0
6. At the meeting of the Round Table on Property and Status of the Association of American Law Schools, held on December 28, 1932, Professor Percy
Bordwell of the State University of Iowa, read a paper entitled "Estates Tail
and Determinable Fees in the Property Restatement," of which the following
sentences disclose the point of view: "But enough of criticism of the restatement. To me it seems a combination of ancient or rather early medieval history,
analytic jurisprudence and reportorial legislation but not a statement of the
positive law nor likely to be accepted as such." A discussion ensued in which
criticism of the form in which the restatement was cast was general.
At the last session of the entire Association on December 80, 1932, Dr. William
Draper Lewis, Director of the Institute, initiated a symposium on "The Value
and Use of American Law Institute Restatements in the Teaching of Law."
Professor H. L. McClintock, of the University of Minnesota, concluded his
'discussion by saying: "Therefore, my conclusion has been that while the restatement is a valuable tool for the practicing attorney and the judge and a tool
whose use must be taught, in so far as it can be taught in the law school, its
value as a pedagogical instrument, as a tool for training in law, is practically
nil." Dean Ira P. Hildebrand, of the University of Texas, spoke at some length
in support of his statement, "that the explanatory notes are ninety per cent
of the value of the restatement to me." Among other things he said: "Therefore,
I say this, if the restatements are published and prepared as I want them published and prepared, and as I have always contended that they should be prepared
and published (I even did that in writing more than two years ago in an article
I published), the restatements would be of untold value to the teaching profession
and to the profession at large. But if they are published in the form that contracts was finally published, I say that they will be of value but not of untold

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

A legal audience need not be reminded that the question, though


basically one of form of expression, is nevertheless (and perhaps for
that very reason) a fundamental one. Lawyers live by words: here
is their capital, their servant and too often their master. Wordmagic is the bane and the life of the law.7 With the Institute a
formula as to the way in which words were to be used, briefly stated
in its initial plan, has come to dominate its operations so as to press
the fruitful activities of its scholars into the dry pulp of the pontifical and vague black letter generalities.
The general plan of operation of the Institute is now well known.
The work of restatement has gone forward on seven subjects-Contracts, Conflict of Laws, Torts, Agency, Business Associations,
Property, Trusts-and a model Code of Criminal Procedure has
been prepared. The procedure is for the Reporter of the subjecta professor of law-to prepare a draft of a portion of his subject
which he submits to various conferences of the Advisers on his
subject-law professors with some judges and practising lawyers.
Eventually the draft is submitted to the Institute Council and then
to the Annual Meeting in tentative form. Ultimately it is approved
for publication-the Contracts Restatement being the only one now
so approved.8 The drafts consist of black letter statement of prinvalue. Why do I make this statement? Well, in the first place, I don't like the way
the restatements are prepared. If the original purpose had been carried out
and the excellent text had been followed up, I think the reporters and their
advisers would have done a fine job" [Dean Hildebrand was apparently referring to his article, Contracts for the Benefit of Third Partics in Tezas (1931)
9 TEx. L. REv. 125, 171] Professor Joseph H. Beale, of Harvard University,
Reporter for Conflict of Laws, made this significant statement: "At the risk
,of delaying this body, I feel very much inclined to say what I have wanted to say
for many years about the real nature of these restatements, what they mean, what
they have gone through, and how they got to be what they are. If the discussions in the group of advisers, from the beginning to the end, could have
been taken down in shorthand and published; if we had foreseen that there
-would be a group of discussions on law such as never existed in the world before,
then -we should have documents on the law that would be invaluable in every
-way. . . . We came in with a draft (now speaking of the conflict of laws)
that I drew. I did not like to draw it like that. I fought tooth and nail, with
one other man, Chief Justice Rugg, for a different form of restatement, but I
think we all loyally accepted the opinion of the majority and tried to work the
form that was adopted." From REPORT OF AssocIATION OF AtlICAN LA7
ScHooLs (1932, not yet printed).
7. A recent book which shows how Jeremy Bentham saw this problem as
clearly as he did others in the law is C. K. OGDEN, BENTHAn'S THrony OF FicTIONS (1932) ix, xx, note 2; see also OGDEN AND RICHAS, Tnm MEANinG op
MEANiNG (3d ed. 1930) 223 et seq.
8. The Restatement of Contracts was approved at the Annual Meeting of
the Institute, May 6, 1932. It is expected that the Restatement of Agency will
be submitted for approval at the next annual meeting.

YALE LAW JOURNAL

[Vol. 42

ciples with, in most cases, brief Comments of additional or modifying principles, and Illustrations drawn from hypothetical or
anonymous cases. The Reporter usually supplies to his Advisers
some explanatory notes with judicial citations on a limited number
of the more important sections of the draft. Such notes are unofficial and do not appear in the final publication we now have before
us. That consists only of Principles, Comment and Illustrations
unmarred by the citation of a single authority. It is "the law" of
the subject.
It is perhaps a far cry from this outcome to its beginning, now
officially recognized as occurring in the stirring appeal of Professor
Hohfeld of Yale to the Association of American Law Schools in
1914 for "A Vital School of Jurisprudence and Law." 9 That great
scholar, it is true, was interested in and made his chief claim to fame
through formal jurisprudence, but he envisaged that as but a part
and a small part of the manifold activities of which he dreamed for
his vital school of the future. 10 Even on the plane of formil jurisprudence, he would doubtless shudder at the first section of this
restatement, wherein a formal hornbook definition of a contract
violates his first principle of distinguishing between operative facts
and the resulting legal relations." It is perhaps also a far cry from
a later step when in 1921 the "Committee on the Establishment of
a Juristic Center" of the Association of American Law Schools was
commissioned by the Association to invite the appointment of similar
committees representing the courts, the bar associations and professional and scientific and learned bodies "for the purpose of jointly
9. REPORT OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN LAW SCO0oLs (1914) 76, 137,
reprinted in HOHFELD, FUNDAMENTAL LEGAL CONCEPTIONS (1923) 332, 382.

See Foreword to An Account of the Proceedings at the Organization of tho


Institute in Washington, D. C., on February 28, 1923, 1 PROCEEDINGS OF TIE
AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE (1923) Part II, 1.
10. See ibid and compare HOHFELD, FUNDAMENTAL LEGAL CONCEPTIONS (1923)
67, note 7; cf. also Hohfeld, Fundamental Legal Conceptions as Applied in
Judicial Reasoning (1917) 26 YALE L. J. 710, 713, note 7. ". . . in em-

phasizing for the time being the formal and analytical side of legal problems,
the writer would not be thought to under-estimate the great importance of
other phases of the law, both scientific and practical. He has had occasion
elsewhere to discuss more comprehensively the fundamental aspects of the
law, including historical, or genetic, jurisprudence; comparative, or eclectic,
jurisprudence; formal, or analytical, jurisprudence; critical, or teleological,
jurisprudence; legislative, or constructive, jurisprudence; empirical, or functional, jurisprudence" [Citing the address, ibid].
11. " 1. Contract Defined. A contract is a promise or a set of promises
for the breach of which the law gives a remedy, or the performance of which
the law in some way recognizes as a duty." See criticism by Professor W. W.
Cook, 3 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE (1925) 167 ot seq.

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

creating a permanent organization for the improvement of the law." 12


The change seems to have begun shortly after a meeting on May 10,
1922, of persons called together for organization purposes by this
committee of the Law School Association. The persons present did
form a temporary organization with Mr. Elihu Root as Chairman and
the present Director of the Institute, Mr. William Draper Lewis,
as Executive Secretary. Under the auspices of the committee thus
organized, a report was completed by January 11, 1923, which sets
forth the idea of a "Restatement of the Law." This report supplied
the basis for the organization of the Institute at Washington, D. C.,
on February 23, 1923.
How did the restatement take its present form? This seems to
have been a later development, and in large measure just to have
grown. Though the plan of the law school teachers to form a juristic
center was soon shaped by the organizing committee into the restatement project, yet that committee did not contemplate the divorcing of the restated law from the authorities upon which it was
based. Quite the contrary, as is shown by their explicit statement.
After a discussion of the "Form of the Restatement" the committee
do state their plan of the black letter type, thus: "The chief characteristic of the form of presentation should be the separation by
typographical or other device of the statement of the principles of
law from the analysis of the legal problems involved, the statement
of the present condition of the law, and the reasons in support of
the principles as stated." They then discussed the statement of
principles, arguing that it should be made with the care and precision of a well known statute, though it would not be advisable to
adopt language appropriate for statutory enactment. "The adoption
of a statutory form might be understood to imply a lack of flexibility
in the application of the principle, a result which is not intended." 13
But this same section of their report contains this significant
pronouncement:
"As intimated, the statement of principles should be Accompanied by a
thorough discussion of legal theory. Principles cannot be properly applied
without full knowledge of the legal theories on which they are based. While
this discussion of legal theory should be separate from the statement of
principles, to refer to it as notes or annotations will convey the erroneous
impressions that the discussion intended is a mere explanation or expansion of the principles, rather than what we believe it should be-a thorough
and scientific discussion of the legal theories underlying the principles
made in the light of a full knowledge of the authorities." 14
12. REPORT OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AbiERrCAN LAW ScHooLs (1921) 116.
13. 1 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AtmxcAN LAW INsTrrutm (1923) Part I, 19.
14. Id. at 21. The report continues: "Finally, the work as a whole must
actually be done and show on its face that it has been done with a thorough

YALE LAW JOURNAL

[Vol, 42

From the beginning, the plan seems to have suffered from a


vacillation between the two positions that the restatement should
announce a more or less binding and final rule of law and that it
should be an informed and informing statement of actual legal
realities. On the former plane it is subject to the defects of a code
with an added question as to the nature of the sovereign authority
behind it, but at least it then has the opportunity of boldly forcing
reform. On the latter plane it is bound by conditions as they are,
but it is realistic and actual. The plan has swung more and more
to the former position, but with the important limitation that the
now law must be stated. In result this has meant the assumption
of the chief defects of each position-the rigidity of a code (with
the added unreality that it is a declaration unsupported either by a
sovereign or by past precedent) and without the opportunity for
reform and advance which a code affords.
It is interesting to see how this development occurred. In a conference of the Reporters, their Advisers and a number of the members
of the Council held in June, 1923, it was decided that the publications
of the Institute on a topic shall consist of the following parts, (a)
the Restatement and (b) the accompanying Treatise, but that these
parts shall be separately printed.5 At an October conference of
the same year it was decided that "the Restatement shall contain
Principles of Law, Comment and Illustrations"; that "the Principles shall be direct and positive statements of law, and shall be
printed in separate paragraphs before the Comment"; that "the
Comment [or, as some prefer to call it, the Exposition] shall be
confined" to "direct statements of law explaining the conditions
under which a Principle operates in such manner as to facilitate its
correct application" and "explanations of the reasons for the Principle and the direct statements of law in the Comment itself," and
examination and careful consideration of the present sources of the law. Thil
means that the work should contain a complete citation of authorities, declsiong,
treatises and articles. The legal profession will never have confidence in the
result unless those responsible for the work give this tangible proof of care
and thereby also show that they know and have set forth any difference
between the law expressed in the statement of principles and that found in the
decisions of the courts in each State considered separately. In view of the
present great volume of the sources of American law this examination and
setting forth of authorities will entail much labor and materially affect the
details of the organization necessary to carry on the work. If, however, the
work is to be constructive respect must be shown to the sound instinct of the
legal profession to distrust any statement of what is or what should be the
law unless the statement is based on a careful study of the record of courts
which administer justice, not in supposititious, but in real cases."
15. 2 id. at 34 (1924). See also discussion as to the character of the treatise
and statement by the Director, id. at 44 et seq.

19331

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

that "the Illustrations shall be formal statements of cases introduced


to fix upon the mind the operation of the Principle and the statements
of law in the Comment." 10 Originally Treatises were prepared
dealing with the preliminary sections of the Restatements of Contracts, Conflict of Laws and Torts. But the Treatises gave way to
Commentaries and the Commentaries gave way to the brief Explanatory Notes. All this material was printed and freely circulated
among the members of the Institute and made available for purchase
generally. But it was marked and regarded as merely tentative. Not
until the present volumes appeared, however, was it clear that all
supporting material was to be discarded.
The subordination of everything else to the black letter Principles
seems to have come from a complete absorption of the Institute
activities in their preparation, and this in turn from the steady
emphasis by its officials on the necessity of simplification of the law
by an authoritative statement of it. If time and thought were to be
devoted almost exclusively to the perfection of the black letter, it
seems natural that other matters should be subordinated or neglected.
Soon we find the Director complaining of the difficulty and expense
apparent lack of interest in them
of providing Commentaries and the
7
by the members of the Institute.1
In 1927 President Wickersham recounted the history of the supporting statements in answering the criticisms of the form adopted
made in an article, which still deserves careful consideration, by Mr.
William W. Cook, the author of Cook on Corporations.1 8 President
Wickersham said: "In the light of this history, it must be apparent
that criticism of the work of the Institute for failure to furnish with
each restatement a complete citation of all the authorities upon which
16. Id. at 35, 36 (1924). The following statement appears after the definition of the Comment: "While the majority of the Principles Will be followed
by Comment, there will be Principles to which it will be unnecessary to add
Comment." And the following after the definition of the Illustrations: "The
Illustrations shall be printed after the Comment only when the Reporter
believes their introduction will be helpful. They may be taken from actual
cases, or be supposititious cases; but if taken from an actual case, the report
of the actual case shall not be cited."
17. See Statements of Director Lewis in 3 id. at 121-124, 405-410 (1925)
and in Appendix to 4 id. at 47-50 (1926). The latter contains this illuminating
statement, "If I may express a personal opinion, the impression which the
Commentaries distributed, taken as a whole, make on me is that matters of
doubt and difficulty are not always discussed with sufficient fullness."
18. W. W. Cook, Legal Research (1927) 13 A. B. A. J.281. After stating
his criticisms of the Institute plan, Mr. Cook advocated a combination of "the
American Law Institute plan (with amplifications) and the Halsbury plan,"
i.e. the plan of Lord Halsbury's "Laws of England!'

YALE LAW JOURNAL

[Vol. 42

the propositions of law set forth are based is entirely premature." "0

Other references to the problem appear, some in answer to requests


from members for a fuller statement of supporting material. 20 Meanwhile the Code of Criminal Procedure was prepared, filling 160 printed
pages and with 876 pages of commentaries - commentaries of
authorities so complete as to seem to many an outstanding achievement of the Institute.21 But discussion of the problem seems to have
died down, and attention was focussed on the new idea of local
state annotations to the restatements (hereinafter considered). The
draft now officially presented is apparently the final answer that the
Word alone counts, and the long and tortuous way by which the
Word was ascertained is to be forgotten. We have only the state-

ment of the distinguished Reporter on Contracts, Professor Williston,


that the Council "ultimately decided that increased clearness, brevity,
consistency, uniformity and accessibility could best be achieved by
putting the Restatement in the form of concise rules analogous to
those in a carefully drawn statute." 22
19.

Address of the President, 5

PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN

LAW IN-

(1927) 106; 13 A. B. A. J. 247, 249 (1927). Mr. Wickersham also


said: "A critic of the Institute, in an article in a current law review, lays great
stress upon this point saying, 'The Courts and practitioners will be disappointed
in the poverty of reference.' If the writer had familiarized himself with
the records of the Institute he would have postponed this objection until the
Institute shall have finally decided upon the form and content of the Treatises
which are to follow and explain the Restatements. Quite possibly the temporary Commentaries which are published to aid in the discussion of the Restatements, in some instances may be too meagre, but, as the Director stated
in his report above referred to, the numbers thus far appear to have been
primarily concerned with the Restatements and to have given but little attention
to the Treatises. At the proper time, of course, a decision must be reached
concerning the Treatises." Ibid. Compare also Wickersham, The American
Law Institute and the Projected Restatement of the Common Law in America
(1927) 43 L. Q. Rnv. 449, 463-465.
20. See e.g., 6 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE (1928) 39,
233, 275.
STITUTE

21. But the publication of these commentaries is made with an apology.


"Unlike the Restatements of the common law, which represent an effort to
set forth in summary form the existing state of the law on given subjects, the
Code embodies an effort at reform in criminal procedure, and, therefore, involves
a considerable number of changes in the present law." Id. at 275. Moreover,
the commentaries do not appear in the Official Draft of the Code published in
1930, but only in Tentative Draft, No. 1, (1928) pp. 89-509 (in part) and in
Proposed Final Draft (1930) 161-617 (the residue.)
22. (1932) 18 A. B. A. J. 775, 777. Mr. Williston also said: "It seemed
that the Restatement would be more likely to achieve an authority of its own
that would to some extent, at least, free courts from part of the troublesome
weighing cases and arguments if exact rules were clearly stated without
argument." Ibid.

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

The result seems therefore one naturally following from the loyal
pursuit of an ideal. What is this ideal of an authoritative statement
of the law, which will simplify our legal problems? As anything
more than a vague ideal, stating the general purpose of clarification
and simplification-as a concept which assumes such a thing as "the
law"-it is certainly fallacious, and it is to be doubted if any of the
Reporters and their Advisers really believe it.23 As an ideal I believe
it has been only hampering and stultifying.
No one need quarrel with the objective of making such a clear
statement of existing rules of law as is possible. It is a worthwhile
and helpful purpose, though the present interest of the schools in a
"'realistic jurisprudence" and the present general concern of all
as to the existence even, let alone the smooth functioning, of our
economic order might perhaps suggest the possibility of other worthy
objectives of legal research were the matter an open one. But we
may properly content ourselves with the Institute as it was planned.
Its emphasis from the beginning, however, upon the number and
volume of the printed law reports-from Mr. Elihu Root's opening
remarks on down to the latest statement of Vice President James
Byrne that "in twenty years from now there will be 3,500,000 and
by the end of the century nearly 10,000,000 more pages than there
are today" 2 4-- makes it seem as though the Institute's chief function
was to render it unnecessary for the tired lawyer or judge to acquaint
himself with what is going on in the world today. Our civilization
is complex and our law, if it is to keep abreast of business and social
life, cannot be simple. The very welter of decisions serves some
purpose in making us continuously aware of the everchanging
organism with which we must deal. And if there are more decisions
It is of course eminently fitting that Mr. Williston should state the official
view in support of a work into which so much of his own devoted efforts have
gone. Yet since his first drafts followed more the treatise form, it does not
seem improbable that he shared doubts similar to those of Professor Beale
(see note 6, supra). Moreover in view of the outstanding character of his
great treatise on CONTRACTS (1920) no one should begrudge the enviable position
in which he now finds himself, that this Restatement not only does not supersede his Treatise but makes it absolutely essential to the courts. See cases
cited notes 45, 47, infra.
23. Thus Professor A. L. Corbin, Special Reporter on Contracts, has some
good things to say about the limitations on restating "the" law. Corbin, The
Restatement of the Law of Contracts (1928) 14 A. B. A. J.602; Some Problems
in the Restatement of the Law of Contracts, id. at 652; The Restatement of the
Common Law by the American Law Institute (1929) 15 IOWA L. REv. 19, 24.
24. (1932) 18 A. B. A. J. 775, 778. See also Elihu Root, 1 PROCEEDINGS OF
THE AusIERICAX LAW INSTITUTE (1923) Part II, 48; Report of the Organizing
Committee, d. Part I, at 6, 66 et seq.; Wickersham, op. cit. supra note 19, 43
L. Q. Rnv. at 449-457, and the general literature of the Institute, including the
yearly revision of the "Short Summary of Pertinent Facts."

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printed than we need, the answer would seem to be not to read


the excess. A stiffening intellectual backbone which refuses to be
stampeded by mere volume of printed matter is needed more than a
delusive simplification.
Simplification as an end in itself is false. Simplification as a
clarification and orderly statement of intellectual processes and conclusions is desirable. The idea that there is "the law"-the "common"
non.statutory law-of our forty-eight states, our territories and our
federal system, which can be stated, is the former kind of simplification. Actually the resulting statement is the law nowhere and in
its unreality only deludes and misleads. It is either a generality so
obvious as immediately to be accepted, or so vague as not to offend,
or of such antiquity as to be unchallenged as a statement of past
history.
The other part of the ideal, namely, the securing of authority (i.e.,
the authority of the Institute) to back up statements, seems equally
fallacious. The Institute seems constantly to be seeking the force
of a statute without statutory enactment. Bitter experience with
code making in this country should have warned us of the dangers
inherent even in statutes. So far as statutes can be made to say
something quite definite (for example, to set a rate of interest) they
may at least be understood though they may then be too inflexible
for general use. When, however, they try to formulate rules which
must apply to varying situations, difficulties are many. The code
reform of procedure in this country is an outstanding example. Thus
the attempt to state rules of joinder of parties in abstract general
terms was a failure, and modern reform is in the direction of stating
merely a standard and leaving its application to the discretion of the
courts. 2 5r But after all a statute must mean something because the
state stands behind it. Therefore the courts must construe it, and
a body of statutory interpretation grows up, which is more important
than the original wording of the statute. To this the restatements
ought not and cannot look forward. There is no sovereign power
behind them to compel the courts to breathe meaning into them. If
they do not seem to have meanig the courts should turn to something
else and are doing so.
The process of statutory interpretation, though inevitable, is difficult and full of pitfalls. The restatement interpretation is an un25. This tendency is discussed in many -places, some of which are collected
in my book on CODE PLEADING (1928) c. 6, 7, and see also id. at 75 ot seq.
President Wickersham has well pointed out some of the difficulties of statutory
interpretation. Op. cit. supra note 19, 43 L. Q. REy. at 454, 456. Sea also
Corbin, op. cit. supra note 23, 15 IowA L. REv. at 36-38.

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

reality.26 And without interpretation, or background against which


meaning can be discovered, the black letter statements are not understandable. The idea that words speak for themselves, without interpretation in the light of the circumstance under which they were
composed or arranged, has been too often exploded with reference
to wills, contracts and written instruments
generally, to be believed
27
again with respect to the restatements.
A restatement then can have no other authority than as the product
of men learned in the subject who have studied and deliberated over
it. It needs no other, and what could be higher? Given freedom of
expression to such men, it will stand or fall of its own strength or
lack thereof. In such event, I would have no doubt of its survival.
I would have such doubt, however, if their studies and deliberations
are to be concealed as they are under the present plan. It seems
designed to take away the intellectual strength which a collaboration
of this kind should present.
What do we find in this final product on the law of contracts?
The group of workers is outstanding and it is well known that in
certain instances they have had sharp discussions and have reached
results decidedly in advance of traditional contract views. No flavor
of this appears in the Principles, Comments and mythical Illustrations of the present volumes.
There are a large number of purely bromidic sections, such as
section 3 ("An agreement is a manifestation of mutual assent by
two or more persons to one another.") and section 15 ("There must
be at least two parties in a contract, but may be any greater number.")
No one would wish to dissent from them. They cannot be used in
deciding cases; nor are they now useful in initiating students into
contract law, for the present teaching mode is to start with case
study, not abstract definition. They may afford convenient citations
26. Hence Professor McClintock was perfectly right in rejecting the suggestion of Director Lewis that the restatement might be used for student training in statutory analysis. See note 6, supra. The fact that the Director could
make this claim, however, shows the direction of the official thinking of the
Institute's officers.
27. This fallacy, that words speak for themselves or convey a clear meaning
of themselves, is so often demonstrated (see for example the clear prezentation
of 5 WIGoMRE, EVIDENcE (2d ed. 1923) 2458 et scq.; 2470 et scq.; also,
the books cited in note 7, supra) and is thoroughly rejected in law as a rule of
interpretation of written instruments, where the surrounding facts and circumstances are essential. It continually crops up again, however, and I believe
'it to be at the bottom of the Institute's insistence on the sanctity of the black
letter. In another connection I have tried to point out how lack of appreciation of the historical background of a statute-thought to have a "clear
meaning" of its own-may quite alter and distort its operation. Clarkr, Trial
of Actions under the Codes (1926) 11 CORN. L. Q. 482.

YALE LAW JOURNAL

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to a court, but that is all. In a treatise such statements would also


appear but in decidedly subordinate ways and mainly as mere starting
points for discussion. Here each must be a separate section and
thus appear as one of the six hundred.
The other sections cover up rather than disclose the problems they
face. With no hint afforded by the text, the discussions and qualifications can only be guessed at. Moreover the black letter itself
is, as must be expected, a compromise to cover various views. With
one leg it steps forward; with the other it goes backward. It is
caught between stating the law which should be and the law which
is and often ends by stating only the law that was. Thus in section
381 dealing with election of remedies, subsection 1 in a negative
fashion seems to favor the modern liberal rule, but subsection 2
states the older arbitrary view. 28 The necessity of agreement on
black letter forces each participant to a choice of position which,
when stated as a group result, must inevitably tend towards (a)
the ancient historical rather than the modern rule or possible future
trend, (b) the conventional safe and unoriginal point of view and
(c) a compromise which goes only to the point whereon all are
agreed.
Even those sections most deserving of praise for their forwardlooking point of view show a like vagueness covering the inevitable
compromise. Sections 90 and 372 are outstanding examples.
Section 90 has already become somewhat famous as representing
some modification of the ancient rules of consideration. It states
that
"A promise which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action
or forbearance of a definite and substantial character on the part of the
promisee and which does induce such action or forbearance is binding if
injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise."

There would seem, however, to be left a large place for retreat in


the final "if" clause and we do not know how far the restaters wish
to go. Under the black letter are four formal illustrations, in three
of which the promise is said to be binding. Certain law review
28. "(1) When the alternative remedies of damages and restitution are
available to a party injured by a breach, his manifested choice of one of them
by bringing suit or otherwise, followed by a material change of position by
the other party in reliance thereon, is a bar to the other alternative remedy.
(2) The bringing of an action for one of these remedies is a bar to the alternative one unless the plaintiff shows reasonable ground for making the change
of remedy."
It is difficult to see how the older view can be squared with modern liberality
of amendment under code procedure. I have discussed this point In my CoDE
PLEADING (1928) 335, 501.

19331

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

articles approve the advance made but regret that it goes no further.It is understood that certain of the group desired to go further while
others did not wish to go this far. Dean Hildebrand has cited this
section as an outstanding example of places where publication of
the explanatory notes is needed. 30 Even more than this we need a
complete exposition of the various views of which this gives very
little in the way of key.
Section 372 deals with the rule of mutuality of remedy in the law
of specific performance. The first subsection states that "The fact
that the remedy of specific enforcement is not available to one party
is not a sufficient reason to refuse it to the other party;" while the
second states that the fact that the remedy is available to one party
is not in itself a sufficient reason for making the remedy available
to the other party, but is of weight when it accompanies other
reasons, "and it may be decisive when the adequacy of damages is
difficult to determine and there is no other reason for refusing
specific enforcement." The first provision at least leaves the question
quite at large and seems wholly to repudiate the strict rule. Lacking
the background against which the section was framed, and partly
because of the second provision, one is at a loss to know just how
far the restaters intended to go. 31 Yet I doubt if there is anywhere
a more adequate statement in brief form of the entire problem with
relevant authorities than in Professor Corbin's explanatory notes,
prepared for the final draft but here unavailable.3 2
29. 0. K. Patton, Enforceable Promises in Iowa (1929) 15 IoWA L. REv. 42;
C. B. Whittier, The Restatement of Contracts anw Consideration (1930) 18
Calif. L. Rev. 611. Compare Corbin, op. cit. supra note 23. As to section 90,
see also notes 47, 48, infra.
30. Hildebrand, op. cit. supra note 6. For the explanatory notes, see CONTRACTS TENTATIVE RESTATE5MNT, No. 2 (Am. L. Inst. 1925) 88 notes and
CONTRACT OFFIcmr
DRAFT, No. 1 (Am. L. Inst. 9-15-28) 90 Explanatory
Notes.
31. It will be noticed how the necessity of stating law as an existing thing
inevitably takes away life and vitality of the statement. Even such a black
letter as "The oft asserted rule that the remedy of specific enforcement must
be mutual to both parties is actually not a correct exposition of the decisions"
would go much farther in giving the legal reader some hints as to what is
aimed to be accomplished by the section. The effect of the necessity of compromise and agreement is obvious; it is discussed below in the text.
32. See CONTRACTS PROPOSED FiNAL DRAFT, No. 12 (Am. L. Inst. 1932)
Explanatory Notes to 372. In preparing a easebook on procedure I asked
for and obtained permission to reprint these notes. 2 CrAK's CASES ON
PLEADiNG AND PRocEDURE (1933) 269, 270. The answer to the question propounded by Director Lewis at Chicago in December, 1932, supra note 6, and
subsequently by letter to law professors as to the value and use of the restatements in the teaching of law is, I believe with Dean Hildebrand, clear
and easy. If the work of the experts is made available, there will be no question
as to the law school use of the restatement.

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Particular sections of the Restatement should not be emphasized,


for these merely illustrate the continual difficulty which the required
style causes. One can guess in most cases why the particular form
came to be chosen. Given the limitations, I do not see how these
results could have been avoided in any substantial degree. I do
desire, however, to refer to a few other examples to make my point
quite clear. With reference to the rights of third party beneficiaries
of contracts there has been a striking departure in American law
from the English authorities, and American law teachers by their
writings have had an outstanding influence on the development of
this law. This is not even hinted at in the individually unobjectionable sections on the subject (sections 133 to 147). The sections
concerninj assignment of contract rights likewise do not reveal the
fighting issues underneath. Thus section 167 somewhat blithely states
a desirable rule as to the defenses and set-offs to which an assignee's
right is subject without revealing the conflicting rules and statutes
with which the topic bristles.33 The sections dealing with conditions
(sections 250 and following) do not indicate the problems of pleading involved. And the sections dealing with actions on joint promises
(e.g., sections 118, 125) do not indicate how much the rules as stated
have been changed by statutes.3 4
As to some of these sections it will be said that the restatement
gives the common and not the statutory law. Here, however, is one
of several problems which the Institute has caused for itself and is
now not able to settle satisfactorily. Thus sections 178 to 225 deal
-with the construction of a statute, the Statute of Frauds (originally
adopted in England in 1677) requiring a writing for certain types
of contracts. When is a statute old enough or universal enough or
otherwise worthy of being treated as common law? One cannot
determine any actual policy from this and other restatements.
This problem and the kindred one of stating ancient history as
modern law is strikingly illustrated by an example from the Restatement of Property. In the first section of actual restatementafter the two chapters of definition of terms-the old common law
rule in all its fierceness is stated-that an estate in fee simple can
be created by deed only if words of general inheritance ("and his
heirs") are used, and the statement is clamped down by illustrations
that grants "to B forever" and "to B in fee simple" create only life
33. Compare my book on CODE PLEADING (1928) 472-478.
34. Section 379 is a dogmatic statement of a negative that "a promise to
render personal service or supervision will not be enforced by an affirmative
,decree," without indication as to the extent to which section 380 dealing with
negative decrees limits this rule. In general, however, chapter 12 dealing
-with remedies seems more successful than other portions of the restatement
in suggesting that not all the law of the subject is covered by the black letter.

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

estates in B. From special notes both to this section and to an


equivocal black-letter, thirty pages on, dealing with statutes3 5
(special notes, I believe, do not survive to permanent publication) it
appears that this rule has been abrogated in all but seven jurisdictions by statute and in three of these seven by judicial decision.
This leaves at most only four jurisdictions to which the dogmatic
black letter can apply. 30 Now this is not a result which the Property
group desired. They all supported the statement of the Reporter:
"That such a rule is at the present time a socially undesirable one,
that it represents a survivorship of the formalism of the earlier days
of the common law, is of course undisputed." 37 A majority of them,
however, felt themselves forced by the rules of the Institute to the
stated conclusion-a conclusion, it is submitted, patently absurd.
Such a problem could hardly arise in this stark manner, anyhow,
because it would be affected by other facts and circumstances such
as entry in possession, payment of consideration, and the like. Moreover, the law now offers facilities for carrying out the obvious intent
of the parties even where imperfectly or mistakenly expressed; and
it is not conceivable that a deed would not now be reformed if
necessary to achieve the purpose of both parties to it. In fact the
Property advisers did insert a section stating that such a deed "may
be reformed to carry out the intention of the parties"; but this was
stricken out by the Council on the ground that this was Equity and
-not Property! 3s
The unreality resulting from attempting to divide up the law into
small parts, each dogmatically stated apart from all other rules
and apart from its actual operation in modern society, is illustrated
in a critique of the Restatement of Trusts by Professor T. W.
Arnold.3 9
35.

RESTATEMENT OF THE LAw OF PROPERTY,

30, 48.

T. No. 1 (Am. L. Inst. 3-25-29)

36. In one of these four, however, (New Mexico) there are no decisions;
in another there are only dicta (Connecticut, where I have yet to find a lawyer
-who believes the rule still exists); leaving only more or less direct decisions
in Maine and South Carolina. (In the latter state the rule is referred to as
"a thorn in the flesh.") See citations in the next note.
37. Explanatory Notes, PROPERTY P. No. 15 (Am. L. Inst. 12-10-28) 6.
For the writer's dissent from the law as stated in the black letter see PPERTY
P. No. 15 (C. E. C. 11-15-28) and PROPERTY P. No. 15 (C. E. C. Supplementary
Compare Explanatory Notes, Property T. No. 1, 3-25-29, p. 5.
12-10-28).
38. PROPERTY, P. No. 15 (Am. L. Inst. 11-12-28) 32, omitted in PuOPEnTy T.
No. 1 (Am. L. Inst. 3-25-29).
39. T. W. Arnold, The Restatement of the Lato of Trusts (1931) 31 Cor,
L. Rnv. 800. In referring to the unreal examples used in the Restatement,
Professor Arnold suggests that when in some of them A declares himself
trustee of the next moose he should shoot, "the supposition is that he was

YALE LAW JOURNAL

[Vol. 42

But after all the proof of the pudding is in the eating. Law
professors may point out what they will as to what they wish of the
restatement. The real test is what will the lawyers and the courts
do with it? Here the answer seems already clear and significant.
Two things stand out. One is the development of the idea of the
state annotations and the other is the use already made of the restatements in the judicial opinions.
The idea that the restatements should be annotated to the reported
decisions of each state seems to have come quite naturally from a
felt need of the lawyers to know what the law as given forth by the
Institute really meant in terms of practical application to their
current problems. It seems to have been popular at once as shown
by the expressions of approval from the profession and perhaps
even more by the loyal response from local bar associations to the
very considerable financial burden of their preparation. Now it is
a settled and prominent part of the Institute project that for each
in each state at
restatement state annotations shall be prepared
40
local expense and published by the Institute.
This is surely interesting. It seems like a clear admission against
interest on the part of the Institute, a going over to the treatise idea,
a departure from that of a code. As matters now stand, the annotations are, of course, absolutely necessary to make the restatements
useful to the lawyer. Without them he will be lost in a maze of
generality; with them the sections will take on life and vitality
against the local background. But if the Institute plan of declaring
the law is sound, the state annotations are an anomaly. If the state
decisions support a restatement section, then they are not needed
and at most can only confuse by suggesting that support is needed. If
they qualify or oppose the section, then surely they should not be
brought forth, for unless they are either repudiated or ignored, the
main objective of the Institute is rejected.
Even though invaluable as matters now stand, the state annotations are an expensive way of achieving the desired result. Already
bar associations and law schools are groaning under the weight of
their preparation which is actually breaking their backs. Not only
simply practicing." The method of restatement forecloses any indication of
why A was attempting to use the trust device.
40. Compare Goodrich, The Institute's Restatement and the Michigan Law
(1927) 26 MIcH. L. REv. 153 (an early if not the original attempt to examino
a restatement in the light of local law); Goodrich, The Restatements Locally
Annotated (1928) 14 A. B. A. J. 538. See also the 6 PROCMEDINGS OF THII
AMERIcAN LAW INSTrrUTE (1928) 303, 307 et seq. and the annual reports of Dean
Goodrich as Adviser on Professional and Public Relations and the replies of
the judges to the first draft of the Contracts restatement referred to in note
42, infra.

19331

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

does this absorb attention which should be available for other lines
of legal activity, 41 but I do not see how many associations and schools
are going to meet the financial burden involved as successive restatements appear. Notwithstanding the greatest loyalty, it is
proving an impossibility to carry the work through. Moreover many
restatement sections are so obvious that careful annotation is
not necessary. Then, too, it is difficult over the entire 'United States
to secure competent editors and, unless critical analysis is secured,
the bulk of the annotations are not greatly worthwhile. Probably
a careful general discussion of moot points-a Williston and Corbin
on the Restatement of Contracts-would after all be more helpful
than purely local and wholesale annotations. The latter may be
run down when needed; the former can only be obtained from the
individuals named.
Perhaps even more important as showing the direction of the
wind are the judicial citations of the various restatements. Parts
of the published material have been in existence in printed form
since early in 1925, and the personnel of the membership is such as
to call it to the attention of courts at once.42 There has already been
a substantial number of citations to the several restatements, although not as many as one might suppose from the nature of the
project. 43 But there have been enough to disclose the very definite
trend. It is that the restatements are furnishing the impeccable
judicial citation with which to garnish an opinion and that they are
nor in a
not affecting the course of decision in any material way,
44
way comparable to texts and articles of law professors.
41. Thus the promising judicial council movement, which the state bar
associations ought to be supporting, may die for lack of support.
42. Thus the membership not only includes the presiding justices of all the
American high courts (see pp. 644, 645, supra), but in December 1927, all the
judges of the higher Federal and State Courts were sent copies of the Official
Draft of the First 177 sections of the Restatement of Contracts, the copies
being accompanied by a letter signed by Mr. Root, the President, and the
Director. Extracts from the replies of many judges appear in 7 PnocEEDrNGs
OF THE AwERIcAN LAw INSTrTUTE (1928) 45-54.
43. "A Short Summary of Pertinent Facts", 1932 Revision, lists 127 citations
of restatements to that date, of which 58 are to the Contracts restatement.
There are duplications; one case appears under three headings. With this
might be compared the citations of WIGBIORE ON EVIENCE! or WiLLISTON oN
CONTRACTS (books in a single field) during the same period.
44. See note 45, infra. Of course many articles remain substantially unknown to the bench; but when known often a decision will turn substantially on
a single article. Compare the weight given Professor Corbin's articles on third
party beneficiaries by the Connecticut court in Bauer v. Devenes, 99 Conn. 203,
121 Atl. 566 (1923), and see also the references to WLLISTON ON CONTRACTS
motes 45, 47, infra.

YALE LAW JOURNAL


The use of the citation is apparently of two forms.

LVol. 42
The first is

the general reference as a jumping off point for the opinion. It is


here that the obvious and bromidic sections seem to come to their
own. The second is as the last of a string of citations, usually of
local cases, thus showing that the local rule has outside support.
It is interesting, however, in these contract cases to see the use made
of other authorities, notably of Williston on Contracts. It does not
seem too much to say that while the courts cite the restatement,
they quote, discuss and follow Williston. 45 One cannot read these
cases without seeing the demonstration that the courts, for the
difficult points, need and look to discussion and analysis, not formal
statement.
For the rest the record is scanty. The courts show that they are
willing to repudiate the restatement where it does not agree with
local law, and the lead is taken in this position by that great court
presided over for so many years by a vice-president of the Institute,
Mr. Justice Cardozo now of the United States Supreme Court.40 In
45. Barlow Grain & Stock Exchange v. Nilson, 57 N. D. 624, 223 N. W. 700
(1929)

(the Restatement cited with Wn~isToN oN CoNTRACrs); Port Huron

Machinery Co., Ltd., v. Fred Woblers, 207 Iowa 826, 221 N. W. 843 (1929)
(with Williston, Corpus Juris, etc.); Ross v. Leberman, 298 Pa. 574, 148 AtI.
858 (1930) (with Hare); Byram Lumber & Supply Co. v. Page, 109 Conn.
256, 146 Atl. 293 (1929) (discussing Corbin's articles); Schulze Baking Co, v.
Goodson, 119 So. 353 (Miss. 1928) (with Williston); Heens v. Byers, 174 Iinn.
350, 219 N. W. 287 (1928) (same); Outlet Embroidery Co. Inc. v. Derwont
Mills, Ltd., 254 N. Y. 179, 172 N. E. 462 (1929) (same); Bromfield v. Trinidad
National Investment Co., 36 F. (2d) 646 (C. C. A. 10th, 1930) (same);
People's State Bank v. Smith, 120 Neb. 29, 231 N. W. 141 (1930) (same);
Czarnikow-Rionda Co. v. Federal Sugar Refining Co., 255 N. Y. 33, 173 N. E.
913 (1930) (long discussion of Williston); Irvmor Corp. v. Rodewald, 253 N. Y.
472, 171 N. E. 747 (1930) (with Williston); Tuttle v. Jockmus, 111 Conn. 269,
149 AtI. 785 (1930) (same); W. H. Caldwell v. W. D. Cline, 109 NV. Va. 553, 150
S. E. 55 (1930) (Williston quoted, Page cited); Amies v. Wesnofske, 255 N. Y.
156, 174 N. E. 436 (1931) (Williston cited several times); Ryan v. Progressive
Grocery Stores, Inc., 255 N. Y. 388, 175 N. E. 105 (1931) (Williston quoted);
In re People, 255 N. Y. 428, 175 N. E. 118 (1931) (Williston cited); Erie
Transfer Co. v. 3. Cutler Iron Works, Inc., 47 F. (2d) 1078 (C. C. A. 2d, 1931)
(same); Tillman v. Russo-Asiatic Bank, 51 F. (2d) 1023 (C. C. A. 2d, 1931)
(same); Hudson v. Yonkers Fruit Co. Inc., 258 N. Y. 168, 179 N. E, 373 (1932)
(Williston cited eight times). Only contract citations from "A Short Summary
of Pertinent Facts," 1932 Revision, are considered; hence no cases where the
Restatement is not cited, even though a textbook may have been, are included,
The citations to the Agency restatement are often accompanied by a reference
to MECHEAM on AGENCY. Compare Charbonneau v. MacRury, 84 N. H. 501, 153
AtI. 457 (1931) where the Torts Restatement is cited once and notes from the
YALE LAW JouRNAL and the HARVARD LAW R~vinw each three times.
46. Langel v. Betz, 250 N. Y. 159, 164 N. E. 890 (1929) (Pound, J.); Smith
v. Morin Bros., Inc., 233 App. Div. 562, 253 N. Y. Supp. 368 (4th Dep't 1931);
Lingle Water Users' Ass'n v. Occidental Bldg. and Loan Ass'n, 43 Wyo. 41,

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

certain cases, too, where the Court seems trembling on the verge
of acceptance of a new doctrine, the restatement may be cited as
a final weight inclining the court in the direction it wants to go4
This is worthwhile, as far as it goes, but again it seems that the
courts are looking more for assistance in reasoning and argument
than for mere statement. A single case is quoted in the Institute
publications as showing a greater force to the restatement than is
here indicated. This is a decision of an Ohio intermediate court
with reference to section 90 (discussed above).-s It should be noted,
however, that Professor Ferson had analysed the Ohio cases to the
same effect,49 and the opinion only states "a burden of going forward" upon one who would not follow the restatement.
It may be agreed, since American habits of judicial writing are
as they are, that the furnishing of citations is of value. Yet I can
see nothing less than failure of the Institute purposes if that is
its great accomplishment. Such citations, limited as they are to
non-controversial points, will have no appreciable effect in unifying
and clarifying our common law. Moreover the furnishing of such
297 P. 385 (1931) (all contra to 164 of the Contracts Restatement) ; Cullings
v. Goetz, 256 N. Y. 287, 176 N. E. 397 (1931) (Cardozo, C. J.; contra to 227
of the Torts Restatement). Compare McClelland v. Climax Hosiery Mills, 252
N. Y. 347, 169 N. E. 605 (1930) (Cardozo, C. J.); Ferro v. Sinsheimer, Est.,
Inc-, 256 N. Y. 398, 176 N. E. 817 (1931) (Hubbs, J., Torts Restatement, 211).
47. This is possibly the situation in Byram Lumber & Supply Co. v. Page,
supra note 45; Greiner v. Greiner, 131 Kan. 764, 293 P. 759 (1930) ; and Wilson
v. Oliver Costich Co., 231 A. D. 346, 247 N. Y. Supp. 131 (1931). Professor
Patton (in op. cit. supra note 29) traces a dictum in Port Huron Machinery
Co., Ltd., v. Fred Wohlers, supra note 45, to Section 90, though it is interesting
that to this point the opinion cites Williston alone. With Saunders Co. v.
Galbraith, note 48 infra, these seem to be all out of the 58 contract cases
cited in the "Short Summary" (note 43 supra) where Institute influence on
the result is indicated. Compare also Weissman v. Banque de Bruxelles, 254
N. Y. 488, 173 N. E. 835 (1930) (conflict of laws); Indemnity Ins. Co. of N. A.
v. Stamberger, 37 Ohio. App. 263, 174 N. E. 629 (1930) (same, referring to
support of "our views" by "Judge Beale"); Kilmer v. White, 254 N. Y. 64,
171 N. E. 908 (1930) (torts).
48. Mr. Justice Mauck, 40 Ohio App. 155, 158, 178 N. E. 34, 35 (1931):
"By following the admirable notes of Professor Person it would not be difficult
to sustain the soundness of Section 90 as the boiled-down essence of the law
of Ohio. We are content, however, to take the Restatement as the law of this
state without exploring its soundness, and hold that of its own vigor it is
adequate authority. This is not to say that the Restatement is of necessity
perfect and that in it is to be found the law's last word. We only hold that
he who would not have it followed has the burden of demonstrating its unsoundness."
49. Compare M. L. FERSON, OHIO ANNOTATIONS TO SEC. 90 (Ama. L. Inst.)
171-174 (Suppl. to Vol. V, U. OF CINN. L. REV. 171-174 1931), "The rule stated
in this section, although broader than that generally laid down, seems to have
the support of the Ohio decisions," citing Ohio cases.

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citations is a by-product of any more ambitious attempt at analysis


and clarification. The Institute, if it were assisting and moulding
judicial opinion, would necessarily and incidentally supply authority
which might be quoted on the non-controversial features of the
law as well. Again such formal citations may be supplied by all
sorts of other things such as encyclopedias and texts, and if the
Institute desired to provide them alone it could do so at comparatively little expense by hiring lawyers to write them. The Institute
throughout has professed to attempt more than this, its personnel
of experts is so organized that it can accomplish more, and surely
we all wish it to do so.
What then should be the steps taken to secure this more extensive
result? It seems to me they are clearly indicated and are quite simple.
They may be expressed as merely making available to the profession
the real activities of the Institute experts, in which it has made such
a considerable investment. This may be accomplished by two important steps: (1) such modification of the Institute's formula of
expression of its restatements as will release the work of the experts,
and (2) such encouragement and preservation of the writings of
individuals concerning the Institute's work as may through careful
planning be found feasible.
As to the first a great change may be made without very extensive
modification of the form of publication merely by a shift in emphasis
from stating the law to stating the conclusions of the experts as to
the general situation in the country upon the topics consideied. The
plan, it seems to me, should be that the Comments should state this
general situation with such citations as may be thought necessary,
but without an attempt to exhaust all relevant authority, and should
then set forth, where it is important, such division of opinion as
has occurred among the experts, and finally, the ultimate conclusion
of the group or of a majority thereof. Certain existing explanatory
notes such as those above mentioned with reference to mutuality of
remedy may be taken as somewhat of a model of the possibilities for
the Comments. Nor'need the black letter be rejected. If it be made
to serve its proper subordinate function as a summary, an index and
a key to the general material, and not be apotheosized as almost but
not a code, then it may serve a proper function, setting forth as
briefly as possible the final group conclusions.
The plan, I believe, will preserve the outstanding contribution of
the Institute to legal research, but will avoid the serious difficulties
of the present scheme. It will still provide for the collaboration of
as informed a group of scholars and practitioners as can be secured
in joint activity. But there will be a gain in the added intellectual
effort secured, in the preservation of original views and vantage

19331

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

points for future development now lost through compromise and


in the saving of expense. At the present time an amazing amount
of energy is spent on polishing and repolishing the black letter. The
group advisers meet at conferences at southern resorts or at law
schools, most enjoyable in their fellowship, but hours at a time Will
be consumed in consideration of a single phrase of the black letter
only to have it reappear for discussion at later conferences. Such
critical care over words defeats its own end, for it makes them of
more importance than they deserve. -The pressure for extreme accuracy leads to a statement so complete as to be really false in the
picture it conveys to the reader. Moreover, it stifles effort on the
part of the Reporter and especially on the part of the Advisers. One
has to become quite aroused to spend much time in preliminary
preparation for a conference when it is clear that the utmost effect
one can have is a minor verbal modification of the black letter. Why
not rely upon the Reporter's assistant for such digging in the cases
as is necessary? If, however, one's point of view properly buttressed
by authority is to be given currency by the Institute, there vil be
real incentive for activity. And the danger now present in the inevitable compromise that the law will be held back, even back of
the point to which courts are now willing to go,r0 will be avoided, for
compromise at the sacrifice of intellectual integrity Will not be asked.
Fully as important is the saving of expense, and the release of
funds for other activities, particularly for the treatises discussed
below. The several conferences and the continual refurbishing of
the sections make for extraordinary slow progress. The expense of
each restatement is enormous. The Council chose the subject of
Contracts as one of its first projects because Professor Williston
had recently published an exhaustive treatise on the subject and this
would make the task of restatement "far simpler than it would otherwise be." 51 Moreover it will be agreed that no clearer topic could
be found in the law. Yet the cost of this restatement alone together
with its state annotations will be, it seems, in excess of $400,000 or
50. This danger was suggested by Dean Roscoe Pound as early as 1931 in
his lectures published as AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PmLWSOPHY OF LAW" (1922)
282, 283:
"Projects for 'restatement of the law' are in the air. But a restatement of
what has never been stated is an impossibility and as yet there is no authoritative statement of what the law of consideration is. Nothing could be gained
by a statement of it with all its imperfections on its head and any consistent
analytical statement would require the undoing of much that the Judges have
done quietly beneath the surface for making promises more widely enforceable.' Quoted by Patton, op. cit. supra note 29, 15 IowA L. REv. at 38.
51. I PROCEEDINGs AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE (1923) Part I, G2, 92.

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$650 per section.5 2 If the plan is changed the time of the Reporter
will be released and the conferences can be greatly reduced (by at
least one-half if not more). A single topic should rarely if ever be
considered at more than one conference. Preliminary study should
have enabled each adviser to know the problem and the discussion
should finally come to a vote without the necessity of agreement of
all.
The funds thus released should be used in part to stimulate critical
writings concerning particular portions of each of the restatements.
Attack, defense and careful evaluation of the text and the attendant
law should be encouraged. This will supply the need that the state
annotations are now imperfectly filling and will make unnecessary
the'burden and expense that they entail. A certain amount of such
material has already appeared, although there is grave danger that
it will be buried in the pages of the law reviews. 53 The Institute
should take pains to collect all such material where it is considered
by proper authorities as being worthwhile for preservation and
should develop means of thorough publication of it. It then should
stimulate such production and printing for the future. The exact
ways and means of developing this most important feature of the
Institute's work may well be subjected to careful consideration and
a committee representing the Institute might properly, consider and
prepare detailed plans to this effect.
In this connection it may be suggested that the Institute has already made quite an investment in the education of its experts and
52. The annual reports of the treasurer of the Institute to the close of 1931
show an expenditure on the "Restatement of Contracts" of $99,579.84 and
for general overhead of $710,881. Additional expenditure in 1932, with a
proper allotment from the overhead in view of the prominence of the Contracts
project, should bring the total to at least $250,000; while the remainder would
be accounted for by the state annotations costing from $2000 to $5000 per state,
53. Among articles now in danger of being lost, see the discussions of Messrs,
Oliphant, Williston and Corbin on Mutuality of Obligation in Bilateral Contracts in 25, 26 and 28 CoI. L. REv.; the discussions of Messrs. Green and
Williston on an offer as a promise in 22 and 23 ILL. L. REV.; McDowell, Risks
of Assignee under Restatement of the Law of Contracts (1929) 17 KY. L, J.
339; McDowell, Effect of Pre-existing Legal Duties upon Consideration under
the Restatement of the Law of Contracts (1928) 16 KY. L. J. 306; Branch,
Common Passageways (1931) 11 B. U. L. REv. 309; Warren, Gifts Over on
Death Without Issue (1930) 39 YALE L. J. 332. Professor Warren's article is
typically the kind in which the Institute has a direct stake, likely to be lost.
It is a completely informative monograph prepared for the Property restatement, but not discussing the restatement itself. See also the discussions of
Messrs. Bruton and Williston: Bruton, The Requirement of Delivery As Applied
to Gifts of Choses in Action (1930) 39 YALE L. J. 837, and Williston, Gifts of
Rights Under Contracts in Writing by Delivery of the Writing (1930) 40 YALn
L. J. 1.

1933]

RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS

it ought to realize upon it. If it does not, they will do so themselves.


It is obvious that text material is vitally necessary and that it will
be supplied by the Institute's workers themselves if the Institute
does not act. But the pressure of other engagements and of other
interests and the chance of death or disability may prevent its being
done in a thorough way. The Institute should foster this work and
4
should itself reap the advantage of it.5
Some, perhaps all, of the developments here suggested are sure to
come in any event. But there is gain of profiting by experience at
the earliest possible moment. The labors to date have by no means
been wasted. The education of bench, bar and professors in methods
and effect of legal research is invaluable. Now, when the first product is at hand, is the time for critical estimate of accomplishment
and envisagement of the future. The plan here suggested, which
is in effect only a shift in emphasis, will give the courts the assistance they need in reaching toward new and original conclusions. It
will shape the law of the future in the way that the present restatements will not and that only the Institute's by-products can now
do in a very limited fashion.
In what I have written above I have from time to time spoken of
the Institute's plan, but I am not sure that I do not owe an apology
for thus speaking. On many of these points I cannot be sure that
the entire Institute has an official plan and I have been forced to
look to the statements of its officers. In view of this doubt as to
an official position, and since we have all been asked to share in this
project which is important and far reaching enough so that we should
do so, is it too much to ask that the matter now be thoroughly recanvassed? Judgment on these points should come not from the officers
of the Institute alone but the decision should be shared by at least
the members of the Council and the Reporters and Advisers of the
various groups, and in addition, so far as that is possible, by representatives of the entire membership of the Institute. Now is the
time to make the project what so many people have fondly hoped,
namely, the outstanding development in law in generations.
54. The need of critical articles is pointed out by Professor Corbin, op. cit.
supra note 23.

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