Litigation
Cal. Litig. 2014, Volume 27, Number 2
Content
- New Lawyer Column: Motion Buffet
- Riverisland: Inordinate Burdens or Leveling the Playing Field
- McDermott on Demand: Horsing Around
- Mum's the Word: Why Saying Too Much May Invalidate a Contract
- Litigation Section Executive Committee Past Chairs
- Editor's Foreword This Award-Winning Publication (?)
- Past Editors-in-Chief
- Table of Contents
- From the Section Chair
- Masthead
- From the Section Chair
- Masthead
- Table of Contents
- McDermott on Demand: Horsing Around
- Editor's Foreword This Award-Winning Publication (?)
- Litigation Section Executive Committee Past Chairs
- Mum's the Word: Why Saying Too Much May Invalidate a Contract
- Past Editors-in-Chief
- Riverisland: Inordinate Burdens or Leveling the Playing Field
- New Lawyer Column: Motion Buffet
- Sargon Enterprises v. Usc-a Different Perspective
- The Inelegant Art of Scorched Earth Discovery
- Fighting Procrastination in Legal Practice: Defining and Finding Your Role in the Cycle
- California Attorney Fee Orders: When to Appeal, Defend or Settle
- Mediation Research: What Really Works?
- Adr Update - the Pre-Mediation Conference: An Underused Step Toward Resolution
- Adr Update - the Pre-Mediation Conference: An Underused Step Toward Resolution
- Mediation Research: What Really Works?
- California Attorney Fee Orders: When to Appeal, Defend or Settle
- Fighting Procrastination in Legal Practice: Defining and Finding Your Role in the Cycle
- The Inelegant Art of Scorched Earth Discovery
- Sargon Enterprises v. Usc-a Different Perspective
Riverisland: Inordinate Burdens or Leveling the Playing Field
By David J. Myers
There has always been a tension between written contract expectations and judicial economy, on the one hand, and the prevention of fraud on the other. Until Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Ass’n (2013) 55 Cal.4th 1169, resolution of that tension in California favored contract clarity and the minimization of litigation, even at the expense of truth and fairness. Now, however, as in most states, California courts must consider oral inducements that rise to the level of fraud, even if inconsistent with integrated written contract terms.
[Page 9]
Given the current economic backdrop, this shift in priorities was obviously of great importance to our Supreme Court, and may not create the unmanageable burdens that some may fear, due to the strict pleading and proof requirements applicable to fraud claims that the court highlighted in support of its decision. Indeed, a number of limitations are already being developed by our courts, or have been adopted in other states and may also find acceptance here.