Abstract
This Article draws attention to a conceptual point that has been overlooked in recent
discussions about the theoretical foundations of contract law. I argue that, rather than
enforcing the obligations of promises, contract law concerns complaints against promissory
wrongs. This conceptual distinction is easy to miss. If one assumes that complaints
arise whenever an obligation has been violated, then the distinction does not seem
meaningful. I show, however, that an obligation can be breached without giving rise to
a valid complaint. This Article illustrates the importance of this conceptual distinction
by focusing first on the doctrine of substantive unconscionability. I claim that the doctrine
can be best explained by the way in which a party who engages in exploitative behavior
may lose her moral standing to complain. It is because such a party has lost her moral
standing to complain that the law, through unconscionability doctrine, bars her from
bringing a legal complaint. This explanation avoids the oft-issued charge of paternalism
and it also offers benefits over an alternative state-oriented account developed recently by
Seana Shiffrin. Using the conceptual distinction behind this account of unconscionability,
this Article further argues that recent theoretical debates about the relationship between
contract law and morality have been largely misconceived. Those debates have focused
on whether contract law and morality impose parallel obligations. Once one appreciates
the difference between imposing obligations and recognizing complaints, the comparison looks quite different. Contract law recognizes valid complaints against broken promises,
much as morality recognizes moral complaints.