A good drafting should be crisp, concise, meaningful, purpose-serving, and addressed properly.
But to my dismay, in my practical life - with reference to law and legal matters, I am finding it devious, volumonous, redundant, off-track and repetitive in nature.
So we do have "Principles Vs. Practices".
2007-02-27 02:21:12
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answer #1
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answered by helpaneed 7
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Do you mean what has to be in a contract? It requires the names of the parties, the duties of each party, the amount and terms of payment and the time of performance (when does the work have to be completed). Those are the required elements. As a lawyer, I have to put in a lot more details, but those are the points you have to hit.
2007-02-27 09:32:04
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answer #2
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answered by David M 7
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Their are books on the subject, look at them in library first and buy one that fits your budget and choice.
2007-02-27 09:30:44
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answer #3
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answered by minootoo 7
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say details of subject property,schedule, and terms of deal.
2007-02-27 11:07:28
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answer #4
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answered by nk k 1
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