6 juillet 2022
Disputes Quick Read – 47 de 105 Publications
The English legal system is heralded for its ability to keep pace with technological changes. Smart contracts, distributed ledger technology (such as blockchain) and cryptoassets are high on the agenda when it comes to anticipating and addressing the legal challenges which might arise as new technologies become increasingly mainstream.
The Law Commission's November 2021 report provides useful insights into how the current law might apply in the context of a smart contract.
Key areas which require extra caution include:
While smart contracts seem unlikely to require the creation of new causes of action, they do give rise to new fact patterns which require careful consideration. The categories of claims that might arise in a contractual context will be familiar.
If there has been an error in recording the agreed terms of a contract, a party might seek rectification of those terms so that they reflect the parties' actual common intention at the time of entering the agreement.
These are factors which render a contract defective such that it can be said that it never came into force in the first place, or there are grounds to have it set aside. These include mistake, misrepresentation, duress and undue influence.
The usual principles relating to contractual interpretation and construction would apply to a traditional, natural language contract and be deployed to assess whether an automated code has failed to perform those obligations correctly.
In the case of smart contracts, performance of the code might become physically impossible if there is a technical malfunction or some unforeseen shutdown of the platform on which the code is deployed. Alternatively, there could be an event which causes the code to execute in a way which is radically different from that contemplated by the contract.
If the purpose or performance of a contract involves conduct that is illegal, the contract may not be enforced by the court.
The good news is that the law of England and Wales is sufficient to address legal issues arising in a smart contract context. A more detailed look at some of the points raised in this article can be found here. If you want to know more about smart contracts and the applicable law, please contact the team who will be happy to discuss further.
Andrew Howell and Natalia Faekova unpack an extraordinary case. A Mexican billionaire's strong fraud claim. Former Israeli intelligence operatives hired to target the defendant's solicitor. Secret recordings over wine and dinner. A judge who called it 'anathema to civil litigation' but may have been 'too lenient'.
19 novembre 2025
During an LSLA lecture on transparency and open justice, Mrs Justice Cockerill, recently appointed as Deputy Head of Civil Justice, outlined a pilot practice direction (PD) that will place select court documents squarely in the public domain via a new, public-facing side of the electronic court file (CE-File).
21 octobre 2025
11 juin 2025
30 janvier 2025
6 décembre 2024
14 novembre 2024
14 novembre 2024
15 octobre 2024
14 décembre 2023
13 décembre 2023
17 octobre 2023
4 août 2023
21 juillet 2023
10 juillet 2023
1 juin 2023
20 avril 2023
8 mars 2023
14 février 2023
13 février 2023
8 février 2023
19 janvier 2023
3 octobre 2022
22 septembre 2022
9 août 2022
25 juillet 2022
6 juillet 2022
Welcome news for those pursuing fraud claims in the English Courts
28 juillet 2022
27 juillet 2022
29 juillet 2022
17 juin 2022
13 juin 2022
26 mai 2022
31 mai 2022
4 avril 2022
5 avril 2022
31 mars 2022
21 septembre 2021
13 septembre 2021
6 septembre 2021
2 août 2021
21 juillet 2021
15 juillet 2021
5 mai 2021
21 avril 2021
31 mars 2021
26 février 2021
24 février 2021
20 janvier 2021
12 janvier 2021
23 novembre 2020
16 octobre 2020
23 septembre 2020
7 octobre 2020
15 avril 2020
27 avril 2020
21 avril 2020
2 juin 2020
16 juin 2020
9 juillet 2020
21 juillet 2020
3 décembre 2021
24 novembre 2021
8 octobre 2021
10 janvier 2022
20 janvier 2022
22 mars 2022
7 avril 2022