DEVIATION - A voluntary departure, without necessity, or any reasonable cause, from the regular and usual course of the voyage insured.
Colorable Deviation: A small change in a product or process from what is claimed that is made solely for the purpose of avoiding literal infringement of the claim.
Deviation: A different plan or path from what was initially desired. Device: A piece of equipment or a subsystem; synonyms with physical device, unit.
Deviation when the carrier changes the agreed upon route without the consent of the owner whose cargo the carrier is transporting.
DEVIATION, contracts. When a plan has been adopted for a building, and in the progress of the work a change has been made from the original plan, the change is called a deviation.
Deviation in opinion between an employer and employee regarding the employment terms. Legal-Explanations.com Home ...
Deviation One means of dealing with an obstruction is taking an alternative route around it in order to continue one's journey. This may include passing onto land that is not a part of the highway.
Some delegates, however, were incensed upon discerning minor deviations from English law in the proposed constitution.
: a gross deviation from the standard of care expected of a reasonable person that is manifest in a failure to protect others from a risk (as of death) deriving from one's conduct and that renders one criminally liable ...
Negligence; misconduct; deviation from standard of care. Fiduciary ...
In this, there is no deviation from the time-honoured rule religiously followed by the judiciary. In US v Caraballo, Justice Marcus wrote: ...
Term: Fault Definition: Negligence; misconduct; deviation from standard of care.
It deemed the statute's preamble, which defined when life begins, wholly constitutional. By upholding a state's right to design legislative measures limiting access to abortion services, Webster represented a significant deviation from the Court's ...
shows remarkable deviations in local organization and justice (lagmen, sokes), and great peculiarities as to status (socmen, freemen), while from laws and a few charters we can perceive some influence on criminal law (nidingsvaerk), ...
Demand it from your adversaries, and compel the court to permit no deviations. Lawsuits should be decided solely upon the merits of the law and facts. No lie has any place in the deliberations of justice. Let truth alone guide our courts.
See also: Person, Court, Law, State, Information
 
|