A Tangled Mess in New Hampshire
Characterization plays an important role in conflict of laws. When the choice-of-law rules for contracts are different than the choice-of-law rules for property, a court’s decision to characterize an issue as sounding in “contract” or “property” will inevitably affect which jurisdiction’s law is applied. The New Hampshire Supreme Court grappled with the issue of characterization—though…
Continue ReadingThrowback Thursday: Canada, Cannabis, and Forum Selection Clauses
Companies engaged in transnational litigation prefer, as a rule, to litigate disputes at home. Litigating at home allows a party to rely on lawyers and procedures with which it is already familiar. It also forces the other party to bear the costs of litigating in an unfamiliar legal system and (sometimes) in a foreign language….
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