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Until the 1970s there was no statutory control upon exemption clauses.
In the present chapter we shall consider terms other than exemption clauses.
The difficulty here is that most exemption clauses are vague and ambiguous.
Exemption clauses are to be interpreted the same as any other term regardless of whether a breach has occurred.
It simply curbs the effectiveness of exemption clauses.
From this trilogy of cases the modem approach to the interpretation of exemption clauses has emerged.
The 1977 Act places severe curbs upon the effectiveness of exemption clauses of many sorts.
Exemption clauses are also controlled by statute.
There are several examples of exclusion clauses, often called exemption clauses, in this and other chapters.
The exemption clauses in particular, by which the insurer seeks to limit his liability to the haulier, can be very extensive.
Dealers may also wish to consider including appropriate and reasonable exemption clauses in their supply contracts with respect to advice-giving computer systems.
Unfortunately, however, because of exemption clauses which the Government insisted upon throughout the debates on the Bill, even this minimum reassurance is not possible.
This has enabled the court to adopt a less hostile approach to the interpretation of the wording of exemption clauses.
Under the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 any exemption clauses in the rules must be reasonable.
The law also recognises that unfairness may flow from inequality in bargaining power and addresses oppressive exemption clauses.
The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 renders many exemption clauses ineffective.
Exemption clauses can be sub-divided into exclusion clauses and limitation clauses.
It does, however, extend the scope of terms which can be rendered ineffective; especially when dealing with unfair terms that do not constitute exemption clauses.
Now let us turn to exemption clauses and the effect upon them of the provisions of the Unfair Contract Terms Act.
Weinberg v Olivier is an important case in South African contract law, especially in the area of exemption clauses.
The definition of "reasonableness" applied by the UCTA is the key to understanding its approach to exemption clauses in general.
Exemption clauses are commonly deployed by big business for planning, for protection from liabilities and to control variables that are otherwise uncontrolled.
As such, UCTA 1977 regulates the application of exemption clauses especially against consumers (see Chapter 5).
Other significant contractual terms include suppositions, modal clauses, exemption clauses and non-variation clauses.
Law Commission, Second Report on Exemption Clauses in Contracts (No 69)