Exchange Currency

unconscionability

A legal doctrine whereby a court will refuse to enforce a contract that was grossly unfair or unscrupulous at the time it was made.

Related information about unconscionability:
  1. Unconscionability - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Unconscionability (also known as unconscientious dealings in Australia) is a term used in contract law to describe a defense against the enforcement of a ...
     
  2. Unconscionability - Legal Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    unconscionability noun amoral action, evil accion, immoral action, inconceivableness, inexcusableness, inexpiableness, shameless action, unethiial actoin, ...
     
  3. Unconscionability | LII / Legal Information Institute
    A defense against the enforcement of a contract or portion of a contract. If a contract is unfair or oppressive to one party in a way that suggests abuses during its ...
     
  4. What is unconscionability? definition and meaning
    Definition of unconscionability: That degree of unfairness or unreasonableness of a deal or contract which prompts a court to nullify or modify it. It occurs ...
     
  5. Unconscionability
    The doctrine of unconscionability comes from U.C.C. 2-302. However, courts apply the doctrine to all contracts cases and not just in cases dealing with the sale ...
     
  6. LawNerds.com: Contracts Rules of Law
    Unconscionability requires two elements, both of which must be present in order to make a contract invalid - procedural unconscionability and substantive ...
     
  7. A Reexamination of Nonsubstantive Unconscionability
    THE doctrine of unconscionability, which a court may invoke to invalidate a contract, ... the terms of an agreement.1 Substantive unconscionability arises when a ...
     
  8. Unconscionability: A Critical Reappraisal - JStor
    private agreements has been the doctrine of unconscionability.s That doc- ... s The literature on unconscionability is already quite extensive; for some of the ...