Home (Vicar)
Home  
 
 
Home » Law » Vicar


 

Vicar

Law VetoVicarious liability

Vicarious liability is a form of strict, secondary liability that arises under the common law doctrine of agency - respondeat superior - the responsibility of the superior for the acts of their subordinate, or, in a broader sense, ...

 


Vicarious Liability
An employer is vicariously liable for negligent acts or omissions by his employee in the course of employment whether or not such act or omission was specifically authorised by the employer.

Vicarious Liability
(n). A vicarious liability can be defined as the liability created by an action or non action by a person, ...

Vicarious Liability: The liability of one person for the torts of another.
Voluntary Dissolution: The intentional dissolution of a corporation by its own management.
Voting Right: The right enjoyed by shareholders to vote their shares.

Vicarious Liability: The liability of one person for the torts of another.
Vicodin: A prescription pain reliever containing hydrocodone and acetaminophen. Classified in the same category as Oxycontin, Vicodin contains 5-10mg of hydrocodone.

Vicarious Liability:
When a person is held responsible for the tort of another even though the person being held responsible may not have done anything wrong.

vicarious liability
n. sometimes called "imputed liability," attachment of responsibility to a person for harm or damages caused by another person in either a negligence lawsuit or criminal prosecution.

VICARIOUS LIABILITY: When one person is liable for the negligent actions of another person, even though the first person was not directly responsible for the injury.

Vicarious liability
Where an employer is responsible for the unlawful acts of his/her employees which they committed in the course of their employment regardless of whether the employer knew or approved of those acts.
W ...

Vicarious Liability
Liability imposed on one person for the actions of another, as in the case of an employer who is vicariously liable for the acts of an employee performed in the course and scope of the employee's duties.

Vicarious liability is the duty of a principal, e.g., an employer, to pay for losses occasioned by the acts of an agent, e.g., an employee. Strict liability, under which those engaging in certain undertakings (e.g.

Vicarious liability ยท Corporate liability
Strict liability
Classes of crimes ...

Vicarious liability
Where some person or organization is legally liable for what someone else has done, e.g. a health authority may be liable for the work done by an occupational therapist employed by them.
Voir dire ...

Vicarious Liability A person is held liable for the harm caused by another person. For example, an employer can be held vicariously liable for actions of employees.

Just as the marescalcus intrinsecus acted as the vicar of the marshal for duties "within" the court, so the marescalcus forinsecus was deputed to perform those acts of serjeanty due from the marshal to the Crown "without.

Vicarious liability: Responsibility for the tort of another, even though the person held responsible may not have done anything wrong. This is often the case with employers who may be held vicariously liable for damage caused by their employees.

Moveable items of property which are neither land nor permanently attached to land or a building, either directly or vicariously through attachment to real property.

Independent contractor status also means that an employer may not be vicariously liable for the errors or omissions of the independent contractor towards third-parties.
In Montreal Locomotives: ...

A circuit of ground committed to the charge of one parson or vicar, or other minister having the cure of souls therein. 1 Bl. Com. 111. Whence parochial. 2. In Louisiana, a division of the State known elsewhere as a "county".

In the ecclesiastical law it signified the territory committed to the charge of a parson, vicar, or other minister. Ayl. Parerg. 404; 2 Bl. Com. 112. In Louisiana, the state is divided into parishes.

See also: Vicarious liability, Wrong, Will, Were, Lawyer

Law VetoVicarious liability

 
 rssRSS