APPARATUS - an appliance or device designed for a particular use and produced by physical act or labor. Need a Lawyer? Check Out The 'Lectric Law Library's Searchable Attorney Directory & our Searchable Expert Witness Directory ...
Apparatus Claim: This refers to a patent claim, which describes structurally a piece of equipment and is embraced by the expression "machine" in the definition of patentable subject matter in the U.S. Patent Statute.
An apparatus for carrying goods, travellers or providing a service. This includes sledges, bicycles, prams, wheelbarrows, sedan chairs, and litters; as well as carts, cars and motorcycles. Legally almost all vehicles are carriages.
Expanded Legal Definition of Pari PassuParliament The aggregate or assembly of institutions that comprise the legislative apparatus of government in democratic societies.
The Davis administration lacked the established apparatus to collect taxes, and with the Union blockade, little in the way of import taxes entered the coffers.
We limit access to the Wex authoring apparatus as a way of ensuring that the quality of material here remains high, and free of vandalism of various kinds.
Appliance: Any instrument, mechanism, equipment, part, apparatus, appurtenance, or accessory, including communications equipment, that is used or intended to be used in operating or controlling an aircraft in flight, ...
In the UK this terms relates to the body of law that regulates the responsibilities of the individual to the apparatus of state. The term is also used to refer to the law governing the operation of tribunals and quasi-judicial bodies.
tools of any debtor necessary for his trade and occupation, should be exempted from execution," was held to designate those implements which are commonly used by the hand of one man, in some manual labor necessary for his subsistence. The apparatus ...
The commentaries not so entirely concerned with the text were called Apparatus; and Summae was the name given to general treatises. The first of these works are of capital importance in the formation of a systematic canon T law.
See also: Law, Information, Will, Person, Reference
 
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