Receivership Under Part III of the Insolvency Act 1986, a receiver is appointed by a lender with a charge or mortgage over the company's assets (usually the bank) who, in consequence, of failure to receive payment, ...
Receiver (n) A receiver is the person appointed by a judge to take charge of the property, business etc of another person, to run the business, ...
Receiver: A disinterested outside individual appointed by a court to manage and administer property or money that is in dispute in a lawsuit.
Receiver: A person or corporation appointed by a person who holds a debenture or other security agreement, giving that person authority to take possession of the specified in the debenture.
receiver n. 1) a neutral person (often a professional trustee) appointed by a judge to take charge of the property and business of one of the parties to a lawsuit and receive his/her rents and profits while the right to the money has not been ...
RECEIVER, chancery practice. A person appointed by a court possessing chan- cery jurisdiction to receive the rents and profits of land, or the profits or produce of other property in dispute.
receiver A disinterested person, appointed by the court to receive and preserve property that is the subject of litigation, and to later distribute the property as directed by the court.
receivership n. the process of appointment by a court of a receiver to take custody of the property, business, ...
Receiver A receiver is an agent appointed by the court to manage property in litigation, a custodian of assets. ...
facsimile receiver (electronics) facsimile signal level (electronics) ready-to-receive signal (communications) color facsimile (communications) Check Signer (business term) authotype drum recorder (electronics) drum transmitter (electronics) ...
A buyer or receiver of goods or services Closing The specific time and place at which all contracts associated with the equity loan or refinance are signed and notarized.
inducing a candidate to withdraw by payment or promise of payment (the candidate so induced being guilty of the like offence), paying or agreeing to pay for torches, flags, banners, cockades, ribbons and other marks of distinction (the receiver being ...
It will grant injunctions to prevent waste, or irreparable injury, or to secure a settled right, or to prevent vexatious litigations, or to compel the restitution of title deeds; it will appoint receivers of property, ...
"... the trustee has the same status as the interim receiver. This status obliges the trustee to act equitably and prudently, to cooperate with the court and, in a more general manner, to contribute to the proper administration of justice...." ...
The purposes are to distribute, through a court-appointed receiver, the bankrupt's assets equitably among creditors and, in most instances, to discharge the debtor from further liability.
compare committee curator guardian receiver tutor 2 : a public official charged with the protection of something affecting public welfare and interests specif ...
Mortgagee The lender of money or the receiver of the mortgage document. Mortgagor The borrower of money or the giver of the mortgage document.
AVI (Automatic Vehicle Identification): System combining an on-board transponder with roadside receivers to automate identification of vehicles. Uses include electronic toll collection and stolen vehicle detection.
A life Peer differs from a hereditary Peer in that the receiver cannot pass the title on to his or her children. Although life Peers are appointed by the Queen, it is the Prime Minister who nominates them.
guardian : one who has or is entitled or legally appointed to the care and management of the person or property of another compare committee, conservator, curator, receiver, tutor guardian ad liĀ-tem ...
BAILMENT: A legal relationship created when a person gives property to someone else for safekeeping. To create a bailment the other party must knowingly have exclusive control over the property. The receiver must use reasonable care to protect ...
See also: Receive, Person, Law, State, Court
 
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