When a contract says something “shall be imposed on” a party, it is using obligation language—legal phrasing that creates a mandatory duty. Understanding how obligation phrases work in contracts helps you identify your actual legal duties, spot one-sided terms, and draft agreements that say what you intend.
What Does “Be Imposed On” Mean in a Contract?
In contract law, to impose an obligation means to place a binding legal duty upon a party. When a contract says a duty “is imposed on” or “shall be imposed upon” a party, it means that party is legally required to fulfill that duty—they didn’t necessarily volunteer for it, but they are bound by it.
The passive construction “imposed on” often signals an obligation that arises automatically or by operation of law rather than through express agreement. For example:
- “The duty of good faith and fair dealing is imposed on all parties to this Agreement.”
- “All compliance obligations imposed on data processors under applicable law are hereby incorporated by reference.”
- “Liability for taxes imposed on the Company under Illinois law shall remain with the Company.”
Types of Contract Obligations
Contract obligations come in several forms, each with different language markers:
| Obligation Type | Common Contract Language | Legal Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory (“shall”) | “Party A shall deliver…” | Absolute obligation; failure is a breach |
| Permissive (“may”) | “Party A may terminate…” | Optional; no obligation to act |
| Conditional | “In the event of X, Party A shall…” | Obligation triggered only upon condition |
| Imposed by law | “Obligations imposed under applicable law…” | Incorporated from external legal requirements |
| Absolute obligation | “Party A is unconditionally obligated to…” | No excuse for non-performance, including force majeure |
“Shall” vs. “Will” vs. “Must” in Obligation Language
Lawyers debate endlessly over obligation language. Here’s a practical guide to how courts and experienced drafters treat common obligation words:
- Shall: Traditionally the gold standard for mandatory obligations. Some modern drafters avoid it because courts have sometimes interpreted “shall” as merely directory (important but not mandatory). The plain English drafting movement recommends “must” instead.
- Must: Preferred by many modern drafters for clear mandatory obligations. Unambiguous.
- Will: Often used for predictive statements or promises. Less reliable as a mandatory obligation term in some jurisdictions.
- May: Permissive. No obligation created.
- Should: Aspirational; generally not a binding obligation.
Imposed Obligations vs. Agreed Obligations
The difference between an obligation you agreed to and one “imposed on” you matters in two main ways:
- Negotiability: Agreed obligations can be modified by the parties. Obligations imposed by law (like Illinois’s implied warranty of good faith, or mandatory data breach notification requirements) generally cannot be contracted away.
- Scope creep in contracts: When a contract says “all obligations imposed by applicable law are incorporated herein,” it is dynamically importing whatever the law requires—meaning changes in law automatically change your contractual obligations. This is a significant clause that founders often overlook.
Practical Tips for Reading “Be Imposed On” Language
- When you see “imposed on” in a contract, ask: imposed by whom? By the other party, or by law? The answer affects whether it’s negotiable.
- Watch for clauses that incorporate all legal obligations by reference—these expand your duties beyond the four corners of the contract.
- Be specific when drafting your own obligations: “Party A shall deliver X by Y date” is better than vague obligation language that courts may interpret differently.
FAQ
Can an obligation be imposed without a written contract?
Yes. Obligations arise from oral contracts, implied contracts, and by operation of law (statutes, regulations, common law duties). The word “imposed” in contract language often signals these non-negotiated, legally-required duties.
Fitter Law helps Illinois founders and businesses draft clear, enforceable contracts with unambiguous obligation language. Learn about our contract review and drafting services.