In contracts, is there a difference between "entered into by", "entered into between" and "entered into by and between"?

Now I'm wondering if these are just three ways of saying the same thing, or whether there's a difference between them in terms of meaning/how they are used.

asked Sep 22, 2021 at 14:51 163 2 2 silver badges 8 8 bronze badges

1 Answer 1

Those are just three ways of saying the same thing, there is no legal difference. One could also say:

All these have the same legal effect, to list the parties to the agreement, and in some cases the date of the agreement. This choice is one of style and habit, the drafter probably following a model that in turn followed an earlier model with no particular thought of why one possible form was used rather than another with the same meaning.