The Duty to Read the Unreadable

Uri Benoliel, Shmuel I. Becher
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

The duty to read doctrine is a well-recognized building block of U.S. contract law. Under this doctrine, contracting parties are held responsible for the written terms of their contract, whether or not they actually read them. The application of the duty to read is especially interesting in the context of consumer contracts, which consumers generally do not read. Under U.S. law, courts routinely impose this doctrine on consumers. However, the application of this doctrine to consumer contracts is unilateral. While consumers are expected and presumed to read their contracts, suppliers are generally not required to offer readable contracts. This asymmetry creates a serious public policy challenge. Put simply, consumers might be expected to read contracts that are, in fact, rather unreadable. This, in turn, undermines market efficiency and raises fairness concerns. Many scholars have suggested that consumer contracts are indeed written in a way that dissuades consumers from reading them. This Article aims to empirically test whether this concern is justified. The Article focuses on the readability of an important and prevalent type of consumer agreement: the sign-in-wrap contract. Such contracts, which have already been the focal point of many legal battles, are routinely accepted by consumers when signing up for popular websites such as Facebook, Amazon, Uber, and Airbnb. The Article applies well-established linguistic readability tests to the 500 most popular websites in the U.S. that use sign-in-wrap agreements. The results of this Article indicate, inter alia, that the average readability level of these agreements is comparable to the usual score of articles in academic journals, which typically do not target the general public. These disturbing empirical findings hence have significant implications on the design of consumer contract law.
阅读不可读之物的责任
阅读原则的义务是美国合同法中公认的组成部分。根据这一原则,缔约双方对其合同的书面条款负有责任,无论他们是否实际阅读了这些条款。在消费者合同中,阅读义务的应用特别有趣,因为消费者通常不阅读合同。根据美国法律,法院通常会将这一原则强加给消费者。然而,这一原则对消费者合同的适用是单方面的。虽然期望并假定消费者会阅读他们的合同,但通常不要求供应商提供可读的合同。这种不对称造成了严重的公共政策挑战。简而言之,消费者可能会被期望阅读实际上相当不可读的合同。这反过来又破坏了市场效率,引发了对公平的担忧。许多学者认为,消费者合同确实是以一种阻止消费者阅读它们的方式写成的。本文旨在实证检验这种担忧是否合理。本文重点研究了一种重要而普遍的消费者协议类型:包装合同的可读性。此类合同已经成为许多法律纠纷的焦点,消费者在注册Facebook、亚马逊(Amazon)、优步(Uber)和Airbnb等热门网站时,通常会接受此类合同。这篇文章对美国500个最受欢迎的网站进行了完善的语言可读性测试,这些网站使用了包装协议。本文的结果表明,除其他外,这些协议的平均可读性水平与学术期刊上文章的通常得分相当,而学术期刊通常不以普通公众为目标。因此,这些令人不安的实证研究结果对消费者合同法的设计具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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