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Operation of law

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Operation of law
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Operation Of Law
It is a legal term used in the court of law for those rights of a person which has been obtained by default, without any of his act or court orders, but by set of rules of law and its application.

Operation of law: A term referring to the determination of rights and obligations merely through application of the existing laws covering a situation.

operation of law
n. a change or transfer which occurs automatically due to existing laws and not an agreement or court order.

Operation of Law
A right or entitlement arising under the law and not as a result of agreement.
Opinion
The stated reason for a court's judgment, finding or conclusion; the court's decision or judgment.

OPERATION OF LAW. This term is applied to those rights which are cast upon a party by the law, without any act of his own; as, the right to an estate of one who dies intestate, is cast upon the heir at law, by operation of law; ...

Term: Operation Of Law
Definition: A right or entitlement arising under the law and not as a result of agreement.
Term: Opinion
Definition: The stated reason for a court's judgment, finding or conclusion; the court's decision or judgment.

Apportionment by operation of law may be brought about where by act of law a lease becomes inoperative as regards its subjectmatter, or by the "act of God" (as, for instance, where part of an estate is submerged by the encroachments of the sea).

Acquittals in law are those which take place by mere operation of law; as where a man has been charged merely as an accessory, and the principal has been acquitted.
adjudicate - To settle in the exercise of judicial authority.

A lien may arise by agreement between the parties or by operation of law from the relation of the parties or the circumstances of their dealings. A special lien applies only to a specific property and any obligations related to it.

a : one who by operation of law inherits the property and esp. the real property of a person who dies without leaving a valid will ­used in jurisdictions whose law is based on English common law
compare issue ...

Compensation takes place, of course, by the more operation of law, even unknown to the debtors the two debts are reciprocally extinguished, as soon as they exist simultaneously, to the, amount of their respective sums.

Devolve When property is automatically transferred from one party to another by operation of law, without any act required of either past or present owner. The most common example is passing of title to the natural heir of a person upon his death.

(2) by operation of law ... (3) by agreement between the parties ... (4) by judicial remedy, e.g., action or suit. The last are called judicial remedies, as opposed to the first three classes, which are extrajudicial." ...

capacity pl: -ties 1 : a qualification, power, or ability (as to give consent or make a testament) created by operation of law 2 : an individual's ability or aptitude ;esp : mental ability as it relates to ...
capital gain see gain ...

Lien:
Security for the holder against a debtor's assets, usually arising by operation of law rather than express contract between the parties.

Pursuant to the Child Citizenship Act of 2000, if a child satisfies certain requirements, he or she acquires U.S. citizenship by operation of law either on the day of admission to the United States or on the day that the last condition for acquiring ...

Subrogation: Substitution of one person or thing for another by operation of law, without the agreement of the person from whom the rights are transferred.

See also: Law, State, Person, Right, Property

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