Fairness and social utility
Much of the law of contract is concerned with ensuring that agreements are arrived at in a way that meets at least minimum standards respecting both parties’ understanding of, and freedom to decide whether to enter into, the transactions. Such provisions include rules that void contracts made under duress or that are unconscionable bargains; protection for minors and incompetents; and formal requirements protecting against the ill-considered assumption of obligation. Thus, section 138 of the German Civil Code renders void any contract “whereby a person profiting from the distress, irresponsibility, or inexperience of another” obtains a disproportionately advantageous bargain. In addition, more general social requirements and views impinge upon contracts in a number of ways. Certain agreements are illegal, such as—in the United States—agreements in restraint of trade. Others, such as an agreement to commit a civil wrong, are held by the courts to be contrary to the public interest. Certain systems discourage some purposes, such as the assumption of a legally binding obligation to confer a gift of money or other gratuitous benefit upon another, by various special requirements.
Legal systems often have recourse to interpretation in the interest of fairness and social utility. Many litigated cases in which a remedy is sought for breach of contract are concerned with the meaning to be attached to the verbal expressions and acts of the parties in their dealing with each other. Ambiguities, for example, may be resolved against the party thought to have the superior bargaining position. This decision is common in cases in which one party is able to set the terms of a contract without bargaining. Again, a written agreement may be interpreted against the party who drafts or chooses the language. Or the court may prefer an interpretation it finds to be in accord with the public interest.
Although all legal systems try to achieve a reasonable approach to freedom of contract, there are bound to be contractual obligations that depart in some degree from the ideal. No one seeking to enforce a contract is required to show affirmatively that it advances specific ends desired by society or that the contracting process is without blemish. Such a requirement would be administratively cumbersome and expensive. In addition, it would reduce the general usefulness of the contract as an economic and social instrument. Differences in the economic resources available to individuals are found in most societies; to the extent that these differences flow from general conditions and are reflected in, rather than produced by, individual contracts, it is usually not feasible to take remedial action through the law of contracts. A single contract, moreover, is often only one element in a complex of economic and legal relations. Thus, in times of severe inflation or deflation, it may simply not be feasible to seek to deal with the resulting inequities in terms of redoing individual contracts.
Contracts of adhesion
There are large areas of economic life in which the parties to contracts have such unequal bargaining positions that little real negotiation takes place. These contracts are often known as contracts of adhesion. Familiar examples of adhesion contracts are contracts for transportation or service concluded with public carriers and utilities and contracts of large corporations with their suppliers, dealers, and customers. In such circumstances a contract becomes a kind of private legislation, in the sense that the stronger party to a large extent assigns risks and allocates resources by its fiat rather than through a reciprocal process of bargaining. Enforcement of such standard contracts can be justified on the ground that they are economically necessary. The question then becomes whether these decisions are to be made by private enterprise or by other agencies of society—in particular, government—and to what extent the interest of those who deal with such economic enterprises can be represented and protected in the decision-making process.
Contract law in such cases provides only what can be called the legal relationship. The content of the relationship derives not from bargaining between the parties but from the fiat of the large enterprise often offset by the fiat of some government agency. In a sense, the socially regulated contract of adhesion seeks to eat the cake of bureaucratic rationality while having, as well, the cake of individual choice and decision. Doubtless both cakes are diminished in the process, but the result may well be more satisfying than if only one had to be chosen. At all events, the resulting legal-economic phenomenon is radically different from that envisaged by traditional contract law. Legislative attempts have been made in a number of countries, such as the former West Germany, the United Kingdom, and France, to strike a balance between the general freedom to contract and the protection of the weaker party.