9780300086973
Changing Your Mind: The Law of Regretted Decisions share button
E. Allan Farnsworth
Format Paperback
Dimensions 5.40 (w) x 8.10 (h) x 0.90 (d)
Pages 288
Publisher Yale University Press
Publication Date August 2000
ISBN 9780300086973
Book ISBN 10 0300086970
About Book
When does the law permit you to change your mind and reverse a decision you have made? In this masterful book, one of the foremost authorities on American contract law considers the general principles and legal rules that bear on this question. Drawing on many fields—contracts, torts, property, trusts, wills, agency, and even family law and procedure—E. Allan Farnsworth identifies and discusses six such principles.

Using real legal cases as well as an array of nonlegal sources ranging from Rousseau and Martin Luther to Shirley MacLaine and Willie Nelson, Farnsworth illustrates the importance of the principles that govern the irrevocability of a commitment (as by a promise) and the irreversibility of a relinquishment (as by a gift) or preclusion (as by prescription). He discusses deficiencies in the law—such as the preoccupation with the reliance principle, the neglect of other principles, the propensity to find promise, and the tendency toward legal paternalism—and offers suggestions to eliminate anomalies, correct shortcomings, and further the rationalization of the legal concepts that pertain to regretted decisions.

About the Author:
E. Allan Farnsworth is Alfred McCormack Professor of Law at Columbia University. He was Reporter for the Restatement (Second) of Contracts and is the author of the three-volume treatise Farnsworth on Contracts and coauthor of Cases and Materials on Contracts.

Reviews

Dennis Patterson

Professor Farnsworth's book is immensely interesting. . . . The conventional academic ear is deaf to the music of doctrine. Farnsworth avidly hears it, reminding us that the law is an intellectually demanding subject on its own terms. It is instructive and inspiring to see such a mind at work.
—( Books on Law)

Library Journal

[Farnsworth] does a good job of explaining the meaning of consideration in contracts, the glue that makes contracts enforceable. . . An intellectually challenging work that does justice to its topic.

R. Heinman

This . . . book by one of the nation's leading scholars on contract law is an exceptionally fine exposition of the principles governing contractual commitment. In clear and simple prose Farnsworth leads the reader through those doctrines that come into play when a party to a contract has second thoughts. . . . Accompanied by useful notes and a comprehensive index, this work belongs in every college library containing a legal collection.
—( Choice)