Super Lawyers2022–2026
Chambers USABand 1 · Commercial
Martindale-HubbellAV Preeminent
Top 50Contract Attorneys

Three Decades.
4,200 Contracts.
Zero Ambiguity.

Commercial contract counsel for mid-market general counsel, CFOs, and founders — from routine vendor agreements to bet-the-company transactions.

Case Study 01High Exposure

Employment Agreement · Non-Compete

The Non-Compete That Collapsed in Delaware Chancery

A private equity-backed distribution company acquired a regional competitor and inherited its standard non-compete package — 36 months, nationwide, covering any "substantially similar" business activity. Counsel was retained eighteen months later, after the acquired CEO resigned and launched a competing firm forty miles away. The company's attempt to enforce the clause lasted eleven days in Delaware Chancery Court.

Employee shall not, directly or indirectly, engage in any business activity substantially similar to or competitive with the Company's business operations within the United States for a period of thirty-six (36) months following termination of employment for any reason...

$2.3Min legal fees and lost revenue before injunction was denied
Get This Template — Enforceable Non-Compete (DE)

"The clause was drafted for a different state, a different industry, and a different decade. By the time it reached my desk it was legally inert — the geographic scope alone would have failed in Delaware regardless of any other defect."

Senior Partner, CounselAnnotation on client file, Matter No. 2024-0441

Counsel Analysis

The redline on this clause went through four iterations before the parties reached language both sides could defend in court. The original draft shifted all consequential damages risk to our client — a position no sophisticated counterparty should accept in a commercial agreement of this size.

Non-Compete Jurisdiction Guide

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Case Study 02Critical Clause

Acquisition Agreement · IP Assignment

The IP Assignment Clause That Saved a $40M Acquisition

Three weeks before closing on a $40M software acquisition, due diligence surfaced a contractor services agreement signed four years earlier. The agreement contained an IP assignment clause that was facially valid but contained a carve-out for "work product created primarily using contractor's own tools and methodologies." The target company's core algorithm had been built entirely by that contractor.

Contractor hereby assigns to Company all right, title, and interest in and to any Work Product created pursuant to this Agreement; provided, however, that such assignment shall not apply to any work product developed by Contractor primarily through use of Contractor's proprietary tools, frameworks, or pre-existing methodologies...

$40Macquisition preserved after 11-day renegotiation of IP terms
Get This Template — IP Assignment (No Carve-Outs)

"Four words — "primarily using contractor's" — created an ambiguity large enough to void the entire assignment. We had eleven days to resolve it before the acquisition fell apart. The counterparty knew exactly what they had."

Senior Partner, CounselPost-closing memorandum, Matter No. 2023-0178

Counsel Analysis

The redline on this clause went through four iterations before the parties reached language both sides could defend in court. The original draft shifted all consequential damages risk to our client — a position no sophisticated counterparty should accept in a commercial agreement of this size.

IP Assignment Clause Checklist

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Free Resource

The Contract Risk Checklist

47 clauses that routinely cost companies seven figures. Annotated with real redline language, jurisdictional flags, and the questions your counterparty hopes you won't ask.

  • Indemnification scope and carve-outs
  • Limitation of liability caps — and when they fail
  • IP assignment vs. license — the $40M distinction
  • Force majeure: what actually qualifies post-2020
  • Non-compete enforceability by jurisdiction

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Case Study 03Litigation Tested

Enterprise SaaS Agreement · Limitation of Liability

The Limitation of Liability That Held Under Litigation

A mid-market SaaS vendor faced a $14M breach-of-contract claim after a platform outage during a client's fiscal year-end close. The vendor's standard MSA included a mutual limitation of liability capped at fees paid in the prior twelve months — approximately $340,000. The client's counsel argued the cap was unconscionable given the known criticality of the deployment. The cap held.

IN NO EVENT SHALL EITHER PARTY BE LIABLE TO THE OTHER FOR ANY INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES... EACH PARTY'S TOTAL CUMULATIVE LIABILITY ARISING OUT OF OR RELATED TO THIS AGREEMENT SHALL NOT EXCEED THE FEES PAID OR PAYABLE BY CUSTOMER IN THE TWELVE (12) MONTHS PRECEDING THE CLAIM...

$13.6Min exposure eliminated — cap enforced at $340K
Get This Template — Limitation of Liability (SaaS)

"The cap survived because it was mutual, reasonable relative to the contract value, and the client had been explicitly warned about the outage risk in the MSA's exhibit. Courts enforce what sophisticated parties negotiate. The language was unambiguous because we made it unambiguous."

Senior Partner, CounselPost-trial analysis, Matter No. 2024-0892

Counsel Analysis

The redline on this clause went through four iterations before the parties reached language both sides could defend in court. The original draft shifted all consequential damages risk to our client — a position no sophisticated counterparty should accept in a commercial agreement of this size.

SaaS Liability Cap Framework

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The Practice

Commercial contracts are
not boilerplate.

Every agreement carries assumptions about risk, leverage, and what happens when things go wrong. After 30 years and 4,200 contracts, we've learned that the clauses no one reads are the ones that determine outcomes.

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Vendor & Supplier Agreements

MSAs, SOWs, and supply chain contracts — structured to protect margin and shift risk.

M&A Transaction Documents

LOIs, asset purchase agreements, and IP transfer documents for acquisitions up to $500M.

Enterprise SaaS & Technology

Subscription agreements, data processing addenda, and SLA frameworks for software vendors.

Employment & Executive Agreements

Non-competes, non-solicitation, and separation agreements built to survive jurisdiction scrutiny.