• Blog Post

    Stormy Daniels and Uber: How Nondisclosure Agreements Affect Your Rights

    Lately the term “non-disclosure agreements” (or “NDAs”)  have inundated the news. These secretive agreements are now forefront in headlines about Stormy Daniels’ alleged affair with President Trump and Uber’s evolving corporate culture in response to claims of sexual harassment and discrimination. This has left many non-lawyers wondering: why do parties enter non-disclosure agreements and how do these agreements work? NDAs are contractual agreements designed to keep specified information confidential.  Such agreements list and/or describe the information prohibited from disclosure and the punishment for disclosing such information, often, a large sum of money known as liquidated damages.  Generally, parties are free to enter a non-disclosure agreement regarding any information, except that…

  • Blog Post

    Text Messages Can Be Writings for Statute of Frauds Purposes

                    The statute of frauds is a legal principal that requires certain contracts to be in writing in order to enforce them.  It is traditionally reserved for contracts involving important or expensive subject matter, such as the sale of land, contracts for marriage, or the sale of goods totaling more than $500.  In these instances, the contract is only enforceable if the terms of the agreement are in writing and it is signed by the party against whom the agreement is being enforced.  It is used as a defense in cases where one party is suing another for breach of contract regarding one of the situations the statute covers.  For…