From corporate-legal
Builds a material contracts disclosure schedule from diligence findings using the purchase agreement's definition and format. Useful for M&A disclosure drafting.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/corporate-legal:material-contract-schedule [purchase agreement path, or paste the Material Contract definition][purchase agreement path, or paste the Material Contract definition]The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
1. Load purchase agreement → Material Contract definition + schedule format.
Matter context. Check ## Matter workspaces in the practice-level CLAUDE.md. If Enabled is ✗ (the default for in-house users), skip the rest of this paragraph — skills use practice-level context and the matter machinery is invisible. If enabled and there is no active matter, ask: "Which matter is this for? Run /corporate-legal:matter-workspace switch <slug> or say practice-level." Load the active matter's matter.md for matter-specific context and overrides. Write outputs to the matter folder at ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/corporate-legal/matters/<matter-slug>/. Never read another matter's files unless Cross-matter context is on.
The purchase agreement has a rep: "Schedule 3.X lists all Material Contracts." This skill builds that schedule from the diligence findings — which contracts are material per the agreement's definition, in the format the agreement requires.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/corporate-legal/CLAUDE.md → materiality thresholds (may differ from the agreement definition — use the agreement's)Pull the definition of "Material Contract" from the purchase agreement — the PA definition controls. Deal-structure differences (stock vs. asset vs. merger) can change how a prong is interpreted, and regulated-industry overlays (healthcare, defense, financial services, telecom, government contracting) can add consent requirements that live outside the PA. If the deal involves any of those overlays, research the applicable anti-assignment or novation rules (for example, federal contracts, government contracting novation, sector-specific consent statutes) and cite the controlling rule.
Common prong categories to look for in the PA definition — these are not a substitute for reading the PA, and the list the PA uses controls:
The PA's definition is the test. Apply it mechanically — every contract that meets any prong in the PA's definition goes on the schedule.
For each contract reviewed in diligence:
| Contract | Meets prong(s) | Include |
|---|---|---|
| [name] | [$X+ annual value; CoC provision] | Yes |
| [name] | [none] | No |
Edge cases to flag for human decision:
For each included contract, the schedule typically needs:
| Field | Source |
|---|---|
| Counterparty name | Contract |
| Contract title/type | Contract |
| Date | Contract |
| Term / expiration | Contract |
| Annual/total value | Contract or management data |
| Which materiality prong it meets | Step 2 analysis |
| Consent required for the deal | Diligence finding |
| VDR reference | Diligence inventory |
Pull from existing diligence extractions. If a field is missing, flag it — don't guess.
Disclosure schedules have a format — usually a numbered list or a table, sometimes with sub-parts by contract type. Match the format of the other schedules in the draft agreement.
## Schedule 3.[X] — Material Contracts
The following are the Material Contracts as of the date hereof:
### (a) Customer Contracts
1. [Agreement Title], dated [date], between [Target] and [Counterparty].
[Brief description if the format calls for it.]
[VDR: path]
2. [...]
### (b) Supplier Contracts
[...]
### (c) Real Property
[...]
[etc. — sub-parts per the agreement's definition structure]
Separately (not in the schedule itself — this is internal), track which scheduled contracts require consent.
The consent overlay and any pre-delivery working draft of the schedule are derived from privileged diligence materials and inherit their privilege and confidentiality status — distribution beyond the privilege circle can waive privilege. The schedule itself, once delivered as an exhibit to the executed PA, is a deal document and is not privileged; strip any internal annotations before delivery.
| Schedule # | Counterparty | Consent required | Status | Owner | Due |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.X(a)(1) | [name] | Yes — CoC §12.2 | Requested | [name] | [date] |
This feeds closing-checklist.
Before delivering:
npx claudepluginhub anthropics/claude-for-legal --plugin corporate-legalCreates Material Contracts disclosure schedules from due diligence findings, applying the SPA/APA definition and exhibit format. Activated by phrases like "önemli sözleşmeler listesini oluştur" or "material contracts schedule."
Systematically identifies, categorizes, and assesses contractual risks across a contract portfolio for M&A, investments, or vendor onboarding.
Activate for: contract, contract review, contract analysis, contract obligation, extract obligations, SLA contract, vendor contract, supplier agreement, master service agreement, MSA, SOW, statement of work, NDA, non-disclosure, contract terms, auto-renewal clause, notice period contract, indemnity, liability cap, penalty clause, contract risk, contract summary, contract management, contract lifecycle, contract negotiation points, key terms, unfavourable terms, obligation extraction. NOT for: vendor evaluation or vendor scoring (use official /vendor-review), compliance obligation mapping (use official compliance-tracking auto-skill), invoice reconciliation or payment disputes (use supply-chain plugin).