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Law Wagner ActWaiver

Waiver - Intentionally given up a right.
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Waiver: Intentionally given up a right.
The Legal Dictionary has taken steps to ensure that all legal, law, and court terms contained in our legal dictionary are correct.

Waiver
(n) Waiver the process of giving up any right on anything with a voluntary action or non action. Waiver of a right can be temporary or permanent nature.

Waiver: A written document that relinquishes an individual's rights.
Witness: A person having knowledge of facts or other information pertaining to a specific situation.

Collision Damage Waiver Rental car insurance that makes the rental car company responsible for damage to or theft of a rental car.

WaiveTo abandon a right or to refrain from insisting on a right or a formality.WarrantA judicial order directing a peace officer to do something such as arrest someone, search or seize something, or enforce a judicial order.

waiver
n. the intentional and voluntary giving up of something, such as a right, either by an express statement or by conduct (such as not enforcing a right).

Waiver:
When a person disclaims or renounces a right that they may have otherwise had. Waivers are not always in writing. Sometimes a person's actions can be interpreted as a waiver.

Waiver - Intentionally given up a right.
Waiver of immunity - A means authorized by statute by which a witness, before testifying or producing evidence, may relinquish the right to refuse to testify against himself or herself, ...

waiver of immunity - A means authorized by statutes by which a witness, in advance of giving testimony or producing evidence, ...

Waive: To relinquish or give up a right, privilege, or benefit. A waiver implies that the person knows what he is doing when renouncing his right, privilege, or benefit.
Ward: 1. A child placed by a court under the care of a guardian.

Waiver
Parties may waive their rights to invoke acceleration clauses by either express agreement or by inducing others to detrimentally rely on their behavior.
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Waiver. A voluntary relinquishment of some right. Stewart v. Crosby, 60 Me. 134 (1863).
Washington City. See District, of Columbia.

WAIVER., The relinquishment or refusal to accept of a right.
2. In practice it is required of every one to take advantage of his rights at a proper time and, neglecting to do so, will be considered as a waiver.

Waive - To give up right or claim voluntarily.
Warrant of Arrest - A writ by a magistrate, justice or other competent authority, to a sheriff or other officer, ...

Waive
Voluntarily give up, such as give up a right. Sometimes an administrative law judge will ask a party : "Do you waive your right to representation?" This means "Do you give up your right to have someone else represent you in this hearing?" ...

waiver: an intentional and voluntary relinquishment of some known right
warrant: a written order directing the arrest of a person issued by an authority - warrants are "issued," "executed" or "canceled" ...

WAIVER - This refers to knowingly and intentionally giving up a right. Example: a defendant waives his right to remain silent by agreeing to be interviewed by police.

waiver of ineligibility In immigration law certain foreign nationals are ineligible for visas to enter the United States for medical, criminal, security or other conditions and activities. Some applicants for visas are able ...

waiver - The intentional or voluntary relinquishment of a known right or such conduct as warrants as inference of the relinquishment of such right.

Waiver
The voluntary and intentional surrender of a right or privilege.
Ward
A person for whom a guardianship has been established.

waive - To give up a right or claim voluntarily.
waiver of immunity - A means authorized by statutes by which a witness, in advance of giving testimony or producing evidence, ...

WAIVE - To abandon, renounce, repudiate or surrender a claim, a privilege, a right, or the opportunity to take advantage of some defect, irregularity or wrong.

Waiver of immunity
A means authorized by statute by which a witness, before testifying or producing evidence, may relinquish the right to refuse to testify against himself or herself, ...

waiver of rights form: A form signed by a defendant and the judge recording which, if any, legal rights are waived (or given up) by the defendant.

Waived Fees:
Court fees, which are not required to be paid because of the financial condition of the party.
Warrant: ...

Waiver
A disclaimer or renunciation to a right that might have otherwise been available. Waivers need not always be in writing and may sometimes be interpreted by a person's actions ...

Visa waiver program
A program that allows nationals from certain countries to come to the United States without a visa as tourists for 90 days.
Persons coming to the United States under this program receive green-colored I-94 cards.

Term: Waiver
Definition: The voluntary and intentional surrender of a right or privilege.
Term: Ward
Definition: A person for whom a guardianship has been established.

Waiver A voluntary, deemed, or assumed abandonment of some right. In many proceedings, if no objection is raised to an act of the opposing party, the court may deem that a waiver has occurred.

Waive
Definition - Transitive Verb
[Anglo-French waiver weiver, literally to abandon, forsake, from waif weif forlorn, stray, probably from Old Norse veif something loose or flapping] ...

Waiver of Right to Appeal: A defendant may waive the statutory right to appeal his sentence. Navarro-Botello, 912 F.2d at 321. However, an express waiver of the right to appeal a sentence is valid only if knowingly and voluntarily made.

waive
v. to voluntarily give up something, including not enforcing a te...
waiver
n. the intentional and voluntary giving up of something, such as ...

WAIVE.
A term applied to a woman as outlaw is applied to a man. A man is an outlaw, a woman is a waive. T. L.,... more ...

Waiver of filing fee or cost bond
The special form you may file if you cannot afford the filing fee and/or the cost bond to ask the Supreme Court to allow you to start the appeal without paying.
Witness ...

Waiver
A voluntary surrender of a known right or privilege.
Warranty Deed ...

w waiver of immunityA witness may give up the constitutional right not to be a witness against himself.
willfulOn purpose.
with prejudiceA dismissal "with prejudice" bars another action for the same cause.

Warren Jeffs waives his extradition hearing, and will be extradited to Washington County, Utah, where he will first face charges as an accomplice to bigamy and rape in arranging polygamous marriages between older men and underage girls.

Related Terms: Waiver By Conduct, Promissory Estoppel
Estoppel is the law's way of saying "you can't have your cake and eat it."
One British judge said, in 1862: ...

Acquiescence also refers to allowing too much time to pass since you had knowledge of an event which may have allowed you to have legal recourse against another, implying that you waive your rights to that legal recourse.

Legal professional privilege: Confidential communications between a lawyer and client may not be revealed in court unless the client, expressly or impliedly, waives the privilege.

The United States Visa Waiver Program allows citizens of 35 countries to travel to the USA without a visa[9].

" When an injured person files a personal injury lawsuit with a court to recover for their damages, the injured person waives this confidentiality, but only to a certain specific degree.

circuit court: felony trials; civil lawsuits seeking injunctions, equitable relief, or damages in excess of $25,000; domestic relations matters; adoptions; child protection proceedings; juvenile delinquency proceedings; emancipation of minors; waiver ...

This includes being shielded from testimony before a court of law. The client may, expressly or impliedly, waive the privilege and, exceptionally, it may also be waived by the lawyer if the disclosure of the information may prevent a serious crime.

For most states, in a criminal trial, a bench trial may happen if the defendant has waived his or her rights to a jury trial. In a civil trial, both parties in the dispute must agree to waive their rights to a jury.

emptorily than in England. A jury is waived more often than formerly, and there is a growing conviction that, with a capable and independent judiciary, justice can be looked for more confidently from one man than from thirteen.

An event, usually a disaster, caused solely by the effect of nature or natural causes. Insurance contracts often waive their obligations for damage caused by hurricanes, floods or earthquakes, calling them "acts of God". See also "force majeure".

affirmative defenses: listed in Rule 8; these defenses must be pleaded in the answer or they are waived; they are generally aimed at destroying the merits of plaintiff's cause of action.

Insurance contracts often exclude "acts of God" from the list of insurable occurrences as a means to waive their obligations for damage caused by hurricanes, floods or earthquakes, all examples of "acts of God".
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nonprovisional application for a patent without examination if the applicant - (1) meets the requirements of section 112 of this title; (2) has complied with the requirements for printing, as set forth in regulations of the Commissioner; (3) waives ...

A federal law that makes it illegal for an employer to use an employee's age to discriminate in benefits or for a company to target older workers for layoffs. This law also requires employers to allow employees at least 21 days to consider waivers ...

Notice may also be waived under some circumstances, allowing one side to obtain a short term temporary order, ex parte. Such an order will normally be reviewed again once both sides have an opportunity to be heard.

The probable cause hearing must be conducted within 60 days of the filing of the complaint or information in Superior Court, unless the accused person waives the time or the court grants an extension based on good cause.

The term composition is also used to refer to an agreement between an insolvent debtor and his creditor, whereby the creditor for some consideration, such as an immediate payment of a portion of the debt, waives the remainder and considers his claim ...

See also: Will, Law, Lawyer, Witness, Waiver

Law Wagner ActWaiver

 
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