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Contribution

Law ContraventionContributions

Contribution 1) The sharing of a loss or discharging of a debt by several persons who may be jointly responsible.

 


Contribution definition:
The right of a person who has discharged a common liability to recover proportionate share from the other(s) that were so liable.
In FBI Foods, Justice Dillon wisely wrote, at ¶14: ...

Contributions are of three kinds, namely: first, those which arise from persons on account of their property, real or personal, or which are imposed upon their industry - those which are laid on and paid by real estate without regard to its owner; ...

Charitable Contribution
In the law of taxation it refers to any contribution in cash or cheque to a non profit organisation which has been qualified to receive charity. Such organisation can be religious, artistic, acedamic, scientific, charity etc.

National Insurance Contributions (NICs) must be paid by employers and employees. They are collected through the "pay as you earn" (PAYE) income tax collection system.

contribution
n. 1) donation to a charity or political campaign. 2) the sharing of a loss by each of several persons who may have been jointly responsible for injury to a third party, ...

defined contribution plan - A pension plan where a preset amount is contributed by the employer. The amount of the benefit payment is dependent upon the amount that is in the employee's fund at retirement.

DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLAN: Also called an individual account plan. A type of retirement plan in which the employer pays a specified amount of money each year, which is then divided among the individual accounts of each participating employee.

Contribution
Definition - Noun
1 : payment of a share of an amount for which one is liable: as
a : shared payment of a judgment by joint tortfeasors esp. according to proportional fault
compare apportion ...

Contribution
In some jurisdictions, an adjoining landowner who uses a wall built partly on his or her land by the other adjoining landowner has no duty to contribute to the cost of construction of the wall.

Contributions made in the 12 months prior to the date of bankruptcy will be recovered (clawed back) for the benefit of the bankruptcy estate for RRSPs in provinces without RRSP exemption laws (BC, Alberta, Ontario, NB, and NS); ...

The contribution by the landlord for the cost of tenant improvement in excess of the base building shell.
Amenities
Additional features that enhance the desirability of a property.

defined contribution plan
Definiciones y fuentes de FMLA
Definiciones y recursos para la contratación ...

Defined Contribution Plan
A defined contribution plan gives an individual account for each contributor, with each account holding a specified amount of money. The value of the account is the account balance.
...

charitable contribution Money or property donated to a qualified charity.
child and dependent care credit A tax credit in the amount of a percentage of the amount expended on child or dependent care by an employed individual.

An important contribution towards this result was made by the organization of the American Bar Association in 1878. Of the fourteen signers of the call for the preliminary Law .

PAVIAGE. Contribution or tax. for paving the streets or highways.
PAWN. A pledge. Vide Pledge.
PAWN-BROKER. One who is lawfully authorized to lend money, and actually lends it, usually in small sums, upon pawn or pledge.

Federal Insurance Contribution Act FICA
Forum
Federal Law American with Disabilities Act ...

Community property recognizes the equal contribution of both parties to the marriage even though one or the other may earn more income through employment.

A principle of tort law which looks at the negligence of the victim and which may lead to either a reduction of the award against the defendant, proportionate to the contribution of the victim's negligence, ...

Members of the Lords who vote only when summoned by their whips but make no other contribution.
Further information on this subject can be found from the following links.
Related glossary term: Whips ...

Earnings that remain after an employer subtracts mandatory deductions (such as income tax, union dues and Social Security contributions) from an employee's gross income.
net estate
The value of all property owned at death less liabilities or debts.

an annual government-wide campaign for charitable contributions from Federal employees
g
CFO/CAO ...

Pension: A sum of money paid periodically to a retired employee, with such funds derived from accumulated contributions made over the years by the employee and employer, or by the employer alone.

As theorists such as Ronald Coase have pointed out, all business organizations represent an attempt to avoid certain costs associated with doing business. Each is meant to facilitate the contribution of specific resources - investment capital, ...

For copyright purposes, a collaboration between two or more authors in which their contributions are joined into a single cohesive work.

Social Security Tax: A payroll deduction based on gross wages paid; this amount is matched by the employer as required by the Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA).

Cross-claim- A pleading which asserts a claim arising out of the same subject action as the original complaint against a co-party, i.e., one co-defendant cross claims against another co-defendant for contribution for any damages assessed against ...

compensation fund: an inter-governmental agency designed to pay compensation for oil pollution damage, exceeding the shipowner's liability. It was created by an imo convention in 1971 and started its operations in october 1978. Contributions come ...

by employers to replace wages and to continue health benefit coverage while an employee is off work following a worker's compensation claim. Wage continuations are often provided at the full employee wage rate and may include continued contributions ...

ecology : The study of the relationships between all living organisms and the environment, especially the totality or pattern of interactions; a view that includes all plant and animal species and their unique contributions to a particular ...

the defendant's, is equal to or greater in terms of contributing to the situation which caused the injury or damage, such comparative negligence may lead to either a reduction of the award against the defendant, proportionate to the contribution of ...

See also: Law, Information, State, Person, Will

Law ContraventionContributions

 
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