Redundancy arises if the employer ceases to carry on or closes the business in which the employee was engaged, if the employer no longer needs the skills of the employee or needs fewer to carry out the work.
REDUNDANCY. Matter introduced in an answer, or pleading, which is foreign to the bill or articles.
Redundancy Fund (Cassa integrazione guadagni, CIG): cash benefits provided as shock absorbers to those workers who are suspended or who work only for reduced time due to temporary difficulties of their factories, ...
Redundancy An employee may be able to bring a redundancy claim if they have worked for their employer for two years or more and are made redundant (e.g. closure of workplace or surplus labour situations). Rescission ...
Copartner A partner (owner) of a partnership. The prefix "co" is a redundancy, since a partner is a member of partnership. The same is true of the term "copartnership." Need Legal Help? Get Informed ...
due n. and adj. owed as of a specific date. A popular legal redundancy is that a debt is "due, owing and unpaid." Unpaid does not necessarily mean that a debt is due. due and owing adj. See also: due ...
In Court orders, the words with prejudice are assumed since a court order is conclusive of the rights of the parties in regards to the issue being thereby resolved. Where these words are added, redundancy notwithstanding, ...
rebuttable presumption n. since a presumption is an assumption of fact accepted by the court until disproved, all presumptions are rebuttable. Thus rebuttable presumption is a redundancy. See also: presumption ...
requiring a witness to answer the question. See sustain. Oxymoron An oxymoron is any unlikely combination of words, e.g., required willingness, punctual procrastinator, advanced mediocrity, or singular redundancy.
See also: Law, Court, Right, State, Will
 
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