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Reverse Payment definition:
A payment by a patent holder to an infringer in consideration of the infringer's cease and desist.

 


Reverse: When an appellate court sets aside the decision of a lower court because of an error. A reversal is often followed by a remand.

Reversed: Reversed means that the appellate court overturned the trial court's decision.

Equivalents-Reverse Doctrine of: This concept is used infrequently. It refers to situations where one might literally infringe on a patent claim, but due to the interpretation of the claim, the situation would not be considered an infringer.

Reverse mortgage
Also known as Reverse Annuity Mortgage (RAM). RAM is a special mortgage where a lender makes monthly payments to the homeowner in an amount determined by the age and health of the homeowner, the term of the loan, ...

Reverse An action of a higher court in setting aside or revoking a lower court decision.
Reversible error A procedural error during a trial or hearing sufficiently harmful to justify reversing the judgment of a lower court.

Reverse
The act of an appellate court setting aside the decision of a trial court. A reversal is often accompanied by a remand to the lower court for further proceedings.

reverse: When an appellate court sets aside the decision of a lower court because of an error. A reversal is often followed by a remand. Return to Top
sentence: The punishment ordered by a court for a defendant convicted of a crime.

reversed: a ruling made by an appellate court disapproving the judgment entered or action taken by the lower court.

reverse mortgage (hecm) the reverse mortgage is used by senior homeowners age 62 and older to convert the equity in their home into monthly streams of income and/or a line of credit to be repaid when they no longer occupy ...

reverse To disapprove or invalidate that which was done by a lower court; i.e., when an appellate court disapproves a decision of a lower court, it is said to reverse the decision of the lower court.

Reverse
The 1782 resolution adopting the seal blazons the image on the reverse as "A pyramid unfinished. In the zenith an eye in a triangle, surrounded by a glory, proper.

TO REVERSE, practice. The decision of a superior court by which the judgment, sentence or decree of the inferior court is annulled.

Reverse mortgage
Definition
: a mortgage that allows elderly homeowners to convert existing equity into available funds provided through a line of credit, a cash advance (as for the purchase of an annuity), ...

Reverse Annuity Mortgage
A loan under which the homeowner receives monthly payments based on his or her accumulated equity rather than a lump sum. Also known as a Senior Loan.
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A reversed onus of proof (q.v.) which applies to applications for bail for some drug offences.
solvent
Able to pay all debts when they are due.

set aside - To reverse, vacate, cancel, annul, or revoke a judgment, order, etc.

backflow : A reverse flow condition, created by a difference in water pressures, which causes water to flow back into the distribution pipes of a potable water supply from any source or sources other than an intended source.

Upon being presented with sufficient evidence of undue influence, a court my reverse the act, e.g., nullifying the will.

In contract law, upon breach of contract, the injured party may ask the court to reverse the contract and revert the parties to their respective positions before the contract was accepted.

On the reverse is a castle, with the words Aurea Roma on the gate, and the circumscription reads, Roma caput mundi regit orbis frena rotundi.

to ask a higher court to reverse the decision of a trial court after final judgment or other legal ruling.

A written request to a higher court to modify or reverse the judgment of a trial court or intermediate level appellate court.

A bill in the nature of a bill of review, is one brought by a person not bound by a decree, praying that the same may be examined and reversed; as where a decree is made against a person who has no interest at all in the matter in dispute, ...

A state court hearing an admiralty or maritime case is required to apply the admiralty and maritime law, even if it conflicts with the law of the state, under a doctrine known as the "reverse-Erie doctrine.

Counterclaim A defendant's court papers that seek to reverse the thrust of the lawsuit by claiming that, despite the plaintiff having brought the lawsuit in the first place, ...

It refers to the jury's ruling reversed in favour of the loosing party of the lawsuit,by the judge, because he feels that the points considered by the jury were not based on the facts and evidences and was doing injustice to the party.

In a reverse mortgage, a homeowner borrows against the value of a house to receive a line of credit or monthly payments.

shorthand acronym of Latin for non obstante veredicto (nahn ahb-stan-tuh very-dick-toe) meaning "notwithstanding the verdict," referring to a decision of a judge to set aside (reverse) a jury's decision in favor of one party in a lawsuit or a guilty ...

To remit is one possible result of an appeal, where the appellate court neither affirms, reverses or modifies the lower court's judgment or order, ...

YEAR AND DAY.
This period of time is particularly recognized in the law. For example, when a judgment is reversed, a party, notwithstanding the lapse of time mentioned in... more ...

In the United States, an earlier move to eliminate capital punishment has now been reversed and more and more states are resorting to capital punishment for serious offenses such as murder
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Also known as the death penalty, capital punishment has been banned in many coutries. In the United States, an earlier move to eliminate capital punishment has now been reversed and more and more states are resorting to capital punishment for ...

Harmless error - An error committed during a trial that was corrected or was not serious enough to affect the outcome of a trial and therefore was not sufficiently harmful (prejudicial) to be reversed on appeal.

A superior court having jurisdiction of appeal and review. It usually consists of three or more judges who have the authority to hear and decide "appeals" from courts under their jurisdiction, and to reverse, affirm or modify their decisions.

harmless error - An error committed by a lower court during a trial, but not prejudicial to the rights of the party and for which the appellate court will not reverse the judgment.

The Supreme Court will not normally reverse a finding of fact by a lower court, unless the decision was so perverse that no ordinary person could have come to such a finding on the facts presented.

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

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