
A couple of weeks ago Artificial Lawyer covered Pramata’s release of a tariff agent to help companies deal with today’s turbulent trade environment. Now ContractPodAi, which is primarily a CLM provider, has released its own Leah Tariff Agent.
The Leah part relates to its genAI legal assistant, which is now deployed across the business for multiple use cases.
They explained that the new agent ‘empowers corporations to proactively navigate the complexities of evolving global tariffs and trade regulations, critically transforming their approach to contract management. Leah provides corporations with the visibility needed to identify, assess, and act upon tariff-related provisions, enabling swift legal recourse and robust contractual protection’.
In more detail, it covers:
‘Supply Chain Optimization: Leah identifies supplier details and manufacturing origins to assess geographic diversity and potential exposure to high-risk regions.
Tariff Responsibility Mapping: Leah clarifies tariff payment responsibilities between buyer and supplier, including obligations triggered by new government regulations. This clarity is fundamental for establishing legal liability, asserting contractual claims, and defending unwarranted charges.
Incoterms & Risk Allocation: Leah highlights delivery terms such as Delivered Duty Paid (DDP), where the supplier assumes responsibility for tariffs, transportation, and delivery, directly translating into minimized legal and financial risk for the buyer and strengthening their position in potential disputes.
Legal Remedy Navigator: Leah identifies and maps all available legal remedies specific to tariff changes within each contract. This analysis includes price escalation protections and notification requirements, force majeure activation pathways with required evidence standards, termination rights with optimal timing strategies, renegotiation triggers based on tariff thresholds, and price adjustment rights with enforcement protocols.
Dispute Resolution Evaluation: Leah analyzes dispute resolution mechanisms, identifying risks such as the omission of mediation steps, unclear arbitration timelines, or unfavorable cost allocations.’
Sarvarth Misra, CEO and Co-Founder of ContractPodAi, commented: ‘By leveraging agentic AI to provide immediate, precise insights, Leah enables our clients to move beyond passive risk management and instead proactively identify and pursue all available avenues for legal recourse, ensuring their contractual rights are protected and their strategic interests are secured.’
As AL mentioned with Pramata, it’s a nice example of deploying AI rapidly to help with an emerging challenge. The only other question is: which will be the next company to do this?
You can find more about ContractPodAi’s new agent here.
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Legal Innovators California conference, San Francisco, June 11 + 12
If you’re interested in the cutting edge of legal AI and innovation – and where we are all heading – then come along to Legal Innovators California, in San Francisco, June 11 and 12, where speakers from the leading law firms, inhouse teams, and tech companies will be sharing their insights and experiences as to what is really happening.
We already have an incredible roster of companies to hear from. This includes: &AI, Legora, Harvey, StructureFlow, Ivo, Flatiron Law Group, PointOne, Centari, LexisNexis, eBrevia, Legatics, Knowable, Draftwise, newcode.AI, Riskaway, Aracor, SimpleClosure and more.
Cooley, Wilson Sonsini, Baker McKenzie, Gunderson, Ropes & Grey, A&O Shearman and many other leading law firms will also be taking part.

See you all there!
More information and tickets here.
P.S. there will also be a Legal Innovators New York conference this November 19 + 20 ! See here.

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