Incidental Beneficiary It refers to the party or person (say A) who is benefited by the execution of a contract between the parties (Say B and C) other than himself but who will have no rights to claim anything from anyone if the contract does not ...
INCIDENTAL - Related to and relatively minor by comparison. Need a Lawyer? Check Out The 'Lectric Law Library's Searchable Attorney Directory & our Searchable Expert Witness Directory ...
incidental beneficiary n. someone who obtains a benefit as the result of the main purpose of the trust.
Incidental and Consequential Losses Special damages are sometimes divided into incidental damages, and consequential damages.
incidental beneficiary - inevitable accident inevitable discovery - innominate contract Inns of Court - intangible property ...
"Fault - which incidentally is not a term of art in English law - one should note that it assumes three forms: malice, intention (including recklessness) and negligence." ...
TOP Person : An entity with legal rights and existence including the ability to sue and be sued, to sign contracts, to receive gifts, to appear in court either by themselves or by lawyer and, generally, other powers incidental to the full ...
With a few exceptions, English courts of law traditionally afforded only this remedy, while the grant of damages in courts of equity was solely incidental to other relief, such as injunction.
list, and having regard to workplaces which remain undefined by the law, the act may broadly be said to apply to premises, rooms or places in which manual labour, with or without the aid of mechanical power, is exercised for gain in or incidental to ...
Fraud is also divided into that which has induced the contract, dolus dans causum contractui, and incidental or accidental fraud.
Proceedings taken during the course of, and incidental to a trial. Examples include procedures or applications made which are to assist a case in preparing its case or of executing judgment once obtained (eg. garnishment or judicial sale).
Proceedings taken during the course of, and incidental to, a trial. These decisions intervene after the start of a suit and decide some issue other than the final decision itself.
Interlocutory: Proceedings taken during the course of, and incidental to a trial. Interlocutory injunction: An injunction which lasts only until the end of the trial during which the injunction was sought.
Stipulation - An agreement between the parties involved in a suit regulating matters incidental to trial. For legal advise regarding Stipulation, you can contact our legal staff via phone (800) 341-2684 or email myweblawyer@aol.com .
An opinion voiced by a Judge that has only incidental bearing on the case in question and is therefore not binding. Latin definition: said in passing. offender A person who commits an offence.
Third-Party Beneficiary A person who receives an intended or incidental benefit by virtue of a contract to which he or she is not a party and for which he or she has paid no consideration.
Interlocutory - Proceedings taken during the course of, and incidental to a trial. Examples include procedures or applications made which are to assist a case in preparing its case or of executing judgment once obtained (e.g.
Conscious Parallelism: An un-discussed imitation by a business of a competitor's action, such as changing prices up or down without the active conspiracy between business rivals, which would make this coincidental activity a violation of ...
Where it is doubtful that an operation is for "compensation or hire", the test applied is whether the carriage by air is merely incidental to the person's other business or is, in itself, a major enterprise for profit.
In fact, a judgment notwithstanding the verdict is occasionally made when a jury refuses to follow a judge's instruction to arrive at a certain verdict. Incidentally, for those of a scholarly bent, ...
The name given to any agreement made by the attorneys engaged on opposite sides of a cause (especially if in writing), regulating any matter incidental to the proceedings or trial, which falls within their jurisdiction.
See also: Law, State, Right, Will, Person
 
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