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Mesne Profits
(n) Mesne profit are the averaged or assumed profit expected to be received by a person in possession of the property.

 


DAMAGES, LOST PROFITS - Amount of profits the plaintiff lost because of diverted sales, price erosion, and/or increased costs.

Distribution Of Profits The withdrawal of profits from a partnership or LLC by a partner or LLC member.
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Profits: Direct recovery of the patent infringer's profits is not possible in a case of infringement of a utility patent, but may, under proper circumstances, be employed as a measure of the patentee's damages.

mesne profits
n. profits which have accrued while there was a dispute over land ownership.

VIOLENT PROFITS, Scotch law. The gains made by a tenant holding over, are so called. Ersk. Inst. R. 2, tit. 6, s. 54.

Profits or advantages from property derived from the terms of a trust agreement.

Net profits of a company that are not distributed as shareholder dividends. Accumulated earnings are often reinvested into the company itself.
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Dividend
Profit ...

A tax placed on the profits from the sale of real estate or investments.
Capitalization Rate (Cap Rate) ...

Expanded Legal Definition of SettlementSettlor The person who actually creates a trust by donating property to be managed and administered by a trustee but from which all profits would go to a beneficiary.

Partners are each fully liable for all the debts of the enterprise but they also share the profits exclusively. Their rights are regulated by their partnership agreement.

Easements and profits à prendre are examples of incorporeal hereditaments as are hereditary titles such as those common in the United Kingdom.

A wealthy man, addicted to his pleasures and his profits, finds religion to be a traffic so entangled, and of so many piddling accounts, that of all mysteries he cannot skill to keep a stock going upon that trade.

Community Property: Property and profits received by a husband and wife during the marriage, with the exception of inheritances, specific gifts to one of the spouses, and property and profits clearly traceable to property owned before marriage, ...

The trustee manages and administers the property, actual ownership is shared between the trustee and the beneficiary and all the profits go to the beneficiary.

Ricardo attacked Smith for putting rent on the same footing with wages and profits as one of the costs of production.

Flags of convenience: the registration of ships in a country whose tax on the profits of trading ships is low or whose requirements concerning manning or maintenance are not stringent.

Illegal items such as narcotics or firearms, or profits from the sale of illegal items, may be confiscated by law enforcement officers.

Although not required, it is an excellent idea to prepare a written partnership agreement between the partners to define items such as ownership percentages, how profits and losses will be divided and what happens if a partner dies or becomes ...

Common business slang to distinguish a corporation whose profits are taxed separate from its owners under subchapter C of the Internal Revenue Code, from an S corporation, ...

Dividend: A fund set aside by a corporation composed of profits that will be apportioned to its various stockholders. When a corporation is profitable, its board of directors will usually declare a dividend.

GAIN
The word is used as synonymous with profits. (q. v.) See Fruit. ... more
GAINAGE
old Eng. law. It signifies the draft oxen, horses, wain, plough, and furniture for carrying on the work of tillage by the baser sort of soke men and... more ...

the process of appointment by a court of a receiver to take custody of the property, business, rents and profits of a party to a lawsuit pending a final decision on disbursement or an agreement that a receiver control the financial receipts of a ...

Corporation - A corporation whose profits are taxed separately from its owners under subchapter C of the Internal Revenue Code.
Calendar - A list of cases scheduled for hearing in court.

Refers to the person or entity (like a charity) who receives assets or profits from an estate, a trust, an insurance policy or any other financial vehicle from which assets are distributed after death.
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Dividend
A proportionate distribution of profits made in the form of a money payment to shareholders, by a for-profit corporation. Dividends are declared by a company's board of directors.

*usus - the right to use the property of another without taking its fruits or profits.

The essential qualities of easements are: they are incorporeal; they are imposed upon corporeal property; they confer no right to participation in profits arising from such property; there must be two distinct tenements, the dominant, ...

They carry rights to distribution of profits through dividends, to the surplus assets of a company on a winding up and to votes at general meetings of the company.

beneficiary One receiving benefit or advantage, or one who is in receipt of financial benefits or profits; usually refers to the person who benefits from, or will benefit from, a trust, a life insurance policy, ...

An incorporeal right which is attached to property and which is inheritable. Easements and profits à prendre are examples of incorporeal hereditaments as are hereditary titles such as those common in the United Kingdom.

They are called securities because the assets and/or the profits of the corporation or the credit of the government stand as security for payment.

roi Acronym for return on investment. ROI refers to the amount of profits or savings a business will realize from any given use of money.

Despite its long formal and informal use with a sexual connotation, the word still retains the meanings of "inspiring disgust" and even "inauspicious; ill-omened", as in such uses as "obscene profits", "the obscenity of war", and the like.

PARTNERSHIP - An association of two or more people who agree to share in the profits and losses of a business venture.
PARTY - An individual person or a legal organization such as a partnership or corporation.

Settlor:
The person who actually creates a trust by donating property to be managed and administered by a trustee but from which all profits would go to a beneficiary. The law books of some countries refer to this person as a "donor." ...

LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY: A business structure that is a hybrid of a partnership and a corporation. Its owners are shielded from personal liability and all profits and losses pass directly to the owners without taxation of the entity itself.

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

Law Product liabilityProhibition

 
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