Is there a reason why original contracts should be single-sided? Our Legal Department requires this.
I’ve never considered this issue. As time goes by, more people are signing contracts electronically, or just trading signature pages, but presumably paper copies of signed contracts currently still have a big role to play. I welcome your input on one-sided versus two-sided.
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Ken Adams is the leading authority on how to say clearly whatever you want to say in a contract. He’s author of A Manual of Style for Contract Drafting, and he offers online and in-person training around the world. He’s also chief content officer of LegalSifter, Inc., a company that combines artificial intelligence and expertise to assist with review of contracts.
Double-sided is fine from a legal standpoint (under English law, anyway). There may be a practical issue – often when photocopying is done, people forget to copy both sides. But nowadays, don’t we all scan documents and copy them by printing out the scan? Reply
Chadwick BuskContracts should not be printed on double-sided paper. The paper savings pales in comparison to the time and trouble it takes to contact a business client who sent me every other page of a contract because he forgot to copy or image both sides of the document. Or perhaps he never received both sides of the contract when it was executed, potentially resulting in bigger problems. Reply
Double-sided is also harder to deal with for documents that are held together by staples, clips or bindings. It works if punched and filed, but otherwise it’s a huge pain to keep flipping from one side to the other – I always get my trainees to print drafts single-sided. Double sided is also a problem if you want people to just print the signature page and sign it – do they have to remember print the following page on the back as well? As someone who is generally quite environmentally friendly, this does pain me, but double-sided isn’t worth the trouble. Reply
For signature and archival purposes, maybe print two- or four pages to a sheet, single-sided? That’s easy to do with Adobe Reader, and I’ve done it with Microsoft Word 2010 also (but the latter might vary with the printer). The text would be small, but most everyone will be reading it on the computer screen anyway. And in the event of litigation, the relevant language will be excerpted. Reply
I like this idea in principle, though I would worry about getting different parties, signing in different locations, to print the pages as instructed – getting people to sign in the right place is hard enough. You would probably end up with different signatures on differently-printed pages. Reply
@Westmorlandia:disqus : Point taken. That could be solved by:1. saving the signature version as a PDF document, using Word 2010’s built-in Save As PDF facility; 2. printing the hard-copy signature page(s) from the PDF and not from the Word document. Reply
Environmental reasons aside, I can’t stand double sided contracts. They are a pain to flip through when reading, and it is common for the person copying or scanning them to forget the backside of each page. If you are the one that needs to make a quick copy, it is much more of a pain. I don’t want to start a debate, but I question the notion that using paper is bad for the environment. Trees pull carbon from the air, and put it in solid form. By responsible foresting, we can put the solid form to good use and allow a new tree to grow, pulling carbon from the air again. Reply
I know this comment is 5 years old, but the creating paper from trees uses kind of bad chemicals to make it white, and there is a lot of waste produced because the whole tree cannot be used. Then there is the power that’s used for the machines to make paper, then the fuel from transporting it. I’m doing a report on it so I just thought I do a quick review of it all. Reply
I know this comment is 3 years old, but i do agree, and back to the topic of double sided contracts, if there’s more than one page in the whole document, double sided means you only have to turn the pages half as many times, and it is better for the enviroment by far. It also looks more elegant, as there is less wasted space and all the pages look similar, and just neater in general. Reply
Even the use of indelible ink has long-term document degradation effects… paper is like a sponge and absorbs ink; indelible or not, indelible ink just takes longer to soak in. Consequently, information written on two sides of a page will inevitable bleed onto the opposing side over time. Therefore, your double-sided documents become an illegible mess of absorbed ink and potential obliteration of information on either document side. Reply
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