Email disclaimers

Published by a ÀÏ˾»úÎçÒ¹¸£Àû Commercial expert
Practice notes

Email disclaimers

Published by a ÀÏ˾»úÎçÒ¹¸£Àû Commercial expert

Practice notes
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This Practice Note considers Disclaimers, in particular email disclaimers, and provides suggested wording.

See also Precedent: Email Notices and email footers.

Introduction

A disclaimer is a device intended to exclude or limit liability under Contract, tort (particularly negligence) or statute. Disclaimers are also referred to as exclusion, limitation of liability or exemption clauses and commonly take the form of a notice or a clause within a set of terms and conditions.

For a disclaimer to be effective, the party seeking to rely on the disclaimer must give notice of the disclaimer to the other party. Timing is critical—notice must be given before the other party can give their assent (whether express or implied through conduct) to the disclaimer. Without notice, a party cannot agree to a disclaimer. Without assent, a disclaimer cannot be enforced against the other party. Drafting cannot cure the absence of notice and assent. What constitutes notice and assent will depend on the context—ie the surrounding circumstances. The more onerous the disclaimer is, the more obvious it must be.

The obvious way for a party to give their

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Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
Key definition:
Disclaimer definition
What does Disclaimer mean?

The right of a trustee in bankruptcy, Liquidator or the Crown to disclaim onerous property (often a leasehold interest). The effect is to bring any ongoing liabilities (of the bankrupt, company or the Crown) in relation to the property to an end.

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