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Public Domain
Related Category: Legal Terms and Concepts
in law, legal availability for public use, free of charge, of materials, processes, devices, skills, and plans that are not protected by copyright or patent, ...

 


Eminent Domain - The power of the government to take private property for public use through condemnation.
For legal advise regarding Eminent Domain, you can contact our legal staff via phone (800) 341-2684 or email myweblawyer@aol.com .

Eminent Domain is the inherent right of a sovereign power to take private property for public use without the owner's consent. The Fifth Amendment of the U.S.

DOMAIN - It signifies sometimes, dominion, territory governed -sometimes, possession, estate - and sometimes, land about the mansion house of a lord. By domain is also understood the right to dispose at our pleasure of what belongs to us.

Public Domain
It refers to either land, property, or any form of creative and intellectual work which is the property of government and thus a public owned. In cases of real assets, they are usually free of cost to use or charged a very nominal fees.

public domain
n. 1) in copyright law, the right of anyone to use literature, music or other previously copyrighted materials after the copyright period has expired. 2) all lands and waters owned by government.

Eminent Domain
The legal right of a city or state over all property within its boundaries, even private property, for the betterment of the public or the community.

Eminent Domain:
USA: The legal power to expropriate private land for the sake of public necessity.
Emolument:
A legal word which refers to all wages, benefits or other benefit received as compensation for holding some office or employment.

eminent domain: the power to take private property for public use by condemnation, i.e.

Public domain
Works in any medium that are not copyright protected under copyright law and are therefore free for all to use without permission.

Eminent Domain: The legal process by which private property is taken for public use without the consent of the owner.
Eviction: Legally forcing a tenant out of rented property. (Housing Publications) ...

eminent domain The power of the state to take private property for public use; results in condemnation.
en banc On the bench; usually refers to situation in which all judges in an appellate court hear a case simultaneously.

EMINENT DOMAIN. The right which people or government retain over the estates of individuals, to resume the same for public use.

Eminent domain
Definition - Noun
: the right of the government to take property from a private owner for public use by virtue of the superior dominion of its sovereignty over all lands within its jurisdiction
see also condemn expropriate take ...

Eminent Domain
The legal process whereby a government can take ownership of a piece of property in order to convert it to public use; often the property owner is paid fair-market value for the property.
Encumbrance ...

See eminent domain.
taking against the will
A procedure under state law that gives a surviving spouse the right to demand a certain share (usually one-third to one-half) of the deceased spouse's property.

Trademarks and Domain Names
The advent of the Domain Name System has led to attempts by trademark holders to enforce their rights over domain names that are similar or identical to their existing trademarks, ...

Expanded Legal Definition of Dominium DirectumEminent Domain USA: The legal power to expropriate private land for the sake of public necessity.

Public domain A term of American copyright law referring to works that are not copyright protected, free for all to use without permission.

NATIONAL or PUBLIC DOMAIN.
All the property which belongs to the state is comprehended under the name of national or public domain. 2. Care must be... more ...

Eminent. See Domain.
Emolument. Any perquisite, advantage, profit or gain arising from the possession of an office.

RIGHT OF EMINENT DOMAIN: The government's right to acquire private property for public use.

But these scientific views had been chiefly applied in the domain of mathematics, astronomy and physics; although great discoveries had already been made in physiology and other branches of biology, ...

Cybersquatting The practice of acquiring a business name, trademark, or celebrity name as a domain name, hoping to later profit by reselling the domain name back to the company or person who has been disadvantaged.

filter is desired, giving the effect of a high-pass filter by implementing a low-pass filter; a filter for combining multiple data sources, usually of different types, by adding filtered values, where the sum of the filters in the frequency domain is ...

the legal process by which a governmental body exercises its right of "eminent domain" to acquire private property for public uses (highways, schools, redevelopment, etc.).

Condemnation/Eminent Domain
the area of law that deals with the right of the government to take property from a private owner for public use by virtue of the superior dominion of its sovereignty over all lands within its jurisdiction.

Statutory Invention Registration (SIR): Registration of an inventionwith the USPTO to place an invention in the public domain.

Xcel, Boulder square off on programsBoulder County Business ReportThe city has hired an energy policy director and retained the services of law firms specializing in eminent domain and utility regulation cases.

Fee Simple Estate: Absolute ownership unencumbered by an other interest or estate; subject only to the limitations of eminent domain, escheat, police power, and taxation.

Condemnation -The legal process by which the government takes private land for public use, paying the owners a fair price. (See eminent domain.) ...

abandonment 1 : the act of abandoning property or a right: as a : relinquishment by an inventor of the right to enforce a patent see also dedication b : an author's relinquishment to the public domain of his ...

Component Reference Model -- a business and performance-driven, functional framework that classifies Service Components with respect to how they support business and/or performance objectives; structured across horizontal and vertical service domains ...

See also: Law, Public, State, Information, Right

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