IANAL; However Usually the contracts have a severability clause, meaning even if some parts of that contract are null and void the rest of it stands minus the parts that are illegal. Does that mean those clauses are also null and void depending on locality? Again IANAL, but I believe it’s pretty settled contract law at least in the US.
Is that true? I can’t find any source for it, except very specific cases where the language and contents of the contract matter.
IANAL; However Usually the contracts have a severability clause, meaning even if some parts of that contract are null and void the rest of it stands minus the parts that are illegal. Does that mean those clauses are also null and void depending on locality? Again IANAL, but I believe it’s pretty settled contract law at least in the US.
There’s zero chance that any user agreements ever have those.
Djtecha seemed to be saying there is some blanket rule in some states.
It’s a pretty common clause in most contracts, so I’m not sure why you’re so confident that they aren’t used in EULAs
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Precisely for this reason?
I…misread the previous message. Makes sense.
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So that the entire contract isn’t void if one provision is struck down.