Williams v Walker-Thomas Furniture Co.
GPTKB entity
Statements (19)
Predicate | Object |
---|---|
gptkbp:instanceOf |
gptkb:law
|
gptkbp:citation |
350 F.2d 445
|
gptkbp:country |
gptkb:United_States
|
gptkbp:date |
1965
|
gptkbp:defendant |
gptkb:Walker-Thomas_Furniture_Company
|
gptkbp:fullName |
gptkb:Williams_v._Walker-Thomas_Furniture_Company
|
gptkbp:heldBy |
A contract may be unenforceable if it is unconscionable.
|
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label |
Williams v Walker-Thomas Furniture Co.
|
gptkbp:judge |
gptkb:J._Skelly_Wright
gptkb:United_States_Court_of_Appeals_for_the_District_of_Columbia_Circuit |
gptkbp:legalIssue |
contract law
unconscionability |
gptkbp:plaintiff |
gptkb:Williams
|
gptkbp:predecessor |
unconscionability doctrine in the United States
|
gptkbp:significance |
Landmark case on unconscionability in contract law
|
gptkbp:subject |
consumer contracts
installment contracts |
gptkbp:bfsParent |
gptkb:Lloyds_Bank_Ltd_v_Bundy
|
gptkbp:bfsLayer |
7
|