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Justification

Law Justifiable homicideJuvenile

Justification for a split profession
The reasons for a split profession are largely historical, but a number of reasons are still advanced for maintaining the split: ...

 


JUSTIFICATION. The act by which a party accused shows and maintains a good and legal reason in court, why he did the thing he is called upon to answer.

Justification
Definition - Noun
1 : the act or an instance of justifying
2 : something that justifies
specif
: a legally sufficient reason or cause (as self-defense) for an act that would otherwise be criminal or tortious ...

Where the justification for an interlocutory order is 'identical' to the justification for an interlocutory injunction, the former ruling is appealable as a merits order inextricably bound up with the injunctive ruling. Id. at 681.

Objective justification
An employer cannot defend a claim of direct discrimination on the basis that the discrimination was justified.

Expanded Legal Definition of Faint Hope ClauseFalse Arrest The intentional and total confinement of a person against his will without lawful justification.

The Justification of Intellectual Property: Contemporary Philosophical Disputes, May 2006 by Kenneth Einar Himma
IPFrontlineā"¢ Intellectual Property and Technology Magazine from PatentCafe. IPFrontline contains thousands of archived articles.

Usually the writ requires the person to whom the command is issued to report at a fixed time (the return day) with proof of compliance or a justification for disobedience.

This expression is used in law with reference to crimes, to describe cases in which, though an offence has been committed without legal justification or excuse, its gravity, from the point of view of punishment or moral opprobrium, ...

TOP Unjust enrichment : A legal procedure whereby you can seek reimbursement from another who benefited from your action or property without legal justification.

A legal procedure whereby you can seek reimbursement from another who benefitted from your action or property without legal justification.

A legal procedure which seeks reimbursement from one who benefits from another's action or property without legal justification.

Those which do not constitute a justification or excuse for an offense but which may be considered as reasons for reducing the degree of blame.
Mittimus ...

Desertion: One spouse voluntarily leaves the other (without justification or consent from their spouse) for an uninterrupted period of time and with no intentions of returning.

Mitigating circumstances: Those which do not constitute a justification or excuse for an offense but which may be considered as reasons for reducing the degree of blame.

MURDER
Intentional homicide (the taking of another person's life), without legal justification or provocation.
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For Cause
With sufficient legal justification to perform an act.
G ...

Publication of false and derogatory statements about another person, without any justification recognised by law. See also: slander, libel.
See slander.
See libel.

Term: For Cause
Definition: With sufficient legal justification to perform an act.

An answer normally denies some or all of the facts asserted by the complaint, and sometimes seeks to turn the tables on the plaintiff by making allegations or charges against the plaintiff (called counterclaims) or providing justification for the ...

Courts often use the 'doctrine of reasonable expectations' as a justification for invalidating parts or all of an adhesion contract: the weaker party will not be held to adhere to contract terms that are beyond what the weaker party would have ...

(2) criminal - the result of any wrongful act without any excuse or justification in law; or ...

required by state or federal law that attempt to compensate for discriminatory practices that have in the past denied fair consideration to members of minority groups. Affirmative defense - A statement by a defendant that provides justification for ...

In order to prove abandonment, four elements must be proven: (1) voluntary separation, (2) no intent to resume living together, (3) lack of consent to the abandonment, and (4) no justification. Abandonment can be actual or constructive.

- A person recklessly causes the death of another, or acting under extreme emotional disturbance, causes the death of another, or acting under circumstances when a person reasonably believes the circumstances provide a legal justification or excuse ...

Warrant(see Warrant)Unified Family CourtTerm occasionally used to describe the Family Court branch of the Superior Court of Justice.Unjust EnrichmentA benefit obtained by one person at the expense of another, without a legal justification ...

money and receiving the mortgage is called the mortgagee; the person who concedes a mortgage as security upon their property is called a mortgagor. Murder Intentional homicide (the taking of another person's life), without legal justification or ...

See also: Law, Court, Person, Action, Right

Law Justifiable homicideJuvenile

 
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