The Restatement of The Law of Contracts
The Restatement of The Law of Contracts
The Restatement of The Law of Contracts
1-1-1933
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MARCH, 1933
No. 5
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]
[Vol. 42
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,
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.
[Vol. 42
1933]
RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS
[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.
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
[Vol, 42
19331
RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS
[Vol. 42
the propositions of law set forth are based is entirely premature." "0
LAW IN-
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."
[Vol. 4Z
1933]
RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS
[Vol. 42
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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1933]
RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS
30, 48.
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
[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.
LVol. 42
The first is
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,
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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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$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