Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Vanderbilt Law Review
Publication Date
1-2023
ISSN
0042-6229
Page Number
571
Keywords
tort law, waivers of liability, unenforceability
Disciplines
Law | Torts
Abstract
Textbook tort law establishes that waivers of liability-—especially those involving physical harm-—are often unenforceable. This Essay demonstrates through an extensive survey of the case law that despite being unenforceable, such waivers remain in widespread use. Indeed, defendants frequently use waivers even when a court has previously declared their specific waivers to be void. So why do such waivers persist? Often the simple answer is to hoodwink would-be plaintiffs. Waivers serve as costless deterrents to tort claims: Either they dupe naïve victims into believing that their claims are barred, or if not, the defendant is no worse off than before. Such flouting of unenforceability doctrine undermines the goals of the tort system-—denying compensation to victims and eroding the care incentives of prospective injurers. In this Essay, we focus some long-overdue attention on the problem of unenforceable waivers and explore some solutions.
Recommended Citation
Edward K. Cheng, Ehud Guttel, and Yuval Procaccia,
Unenforceable Waivers, 76 Vanderbilt Law Review. 571
(2023)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/faculty-publications/1327