A clause library, sometimes referred to as a 'precedent library' or a 'contract clause bank' is a well indexed, searchable, and customizable repository of templatized legal clauses that legal teams pre-construct and pre-approve for use by wider organization in business contracts. The main driver of building and using a clause library is efficiency through easy accessibility and search-ability of standardized legal content. Key to this is extraction of relevant clauses and organization of clauses across key dimensions, such as:
A clause library plays a crucial role in dealing with complex examples involving state jurisdictional differences and regulatory changes.
Let's consider an employment agreement. Over the past decade, there have been significant regulatory changes in employment law, such as the implementation of new minimum wage laws. With a clause library, a lawyer can access updated clauses that reflect these regulatory changes. By incorporating specific clauses tailored to different jurisdictions and staying abreast of regulatory updates, a clause library enhances contract management by ensuring legal compliance and reducing the risk of disputes
Contracts pass through the desks of many stakeholders in any organization. Junior employees drafting or reviewing agreements, not only lack knowledge and experience but also the organizational or relationship context in which the agreements are being made.
As a senior professional, with experience of drafting and negotiating hundreds of contracts, you always have a feeling the the right clause for any given unique situation exists in a contract that you worked on in 2019 (or was it '18). You'll have junior employees frantically search emails, shared drives and eventually rehash an similar 'sounding' / 'looking' clause from 5 years ago but completely irrelevant for the task at hand. You need a comprehensive clause library solution!
Junior employees typically depend on existing contracts (considered internally as 'Golden Contracts'), internet searches, professional websites like ACC, or fall back on their network. While all of these are good ideas, a lack of organizational standards and a system of clause management will mean one of the two things:
On the other hand, when experienced attorneys or contract specialists are working on agreements, their previous experience, and extremely risk-averse perspective can sometimes lead them to draft clauses that are more like artisanal works of art than functional forms of language meant to protect their organization/client's interests.