Surrender is a term that primarily refers to the act of giving up or accepting defeat in battle or conflict. It can also refer to the act of agreeing to give up one's possessions, property or self, to a lawful custodian, landlord, or law enforcers. Surrendering also involves relinquishing...
A forfeited share is a share in a publicly-traded company that the owner loses (or forfeits) by neglecting to live up to any number of purchase requirements. For example, a forfeiture may occur if a shareholder fails to pay an owed allotment (call money), or if he sells or transfers h...
Seizure - This legal term refers to taking control of assets or property while enforcing a law or court order. Forfeiture - It is an act of losing something as a penalty for wrongdoing or breaking the law. Impoundment - It means to take temporary possession of something, often as a result...
Forfeiture - the government's legal process of taking away property or assets from individuals or organizations that have been involved in illegal activities. Seizure - the act of taking control or confiscating property by law enforcement agencies, usually in the context of drugs, weapons, or other...
Forfeiture: The loss or relinquishing of a right or property by failure to fulfill obligations or by instantiative act, as penalty. It can also refer to the failure to pay outstanding debts leading to seizure of property. Legal Dictionary Select a letter from the list below to read all of...
Sovereign defaultoccurs when a country doesn't repay its debts. A country that's in default usually cannot be compelled to satisfy its obligations by a court, unlike an individual or corporate debtor. But it does face a variety of otherrisks and problems. The economy might go into recession...
The suffering, or the sum to be forfeited, to which a person subjects himself by covenant or agreement, in case of nonfulfillment of stipulations; forfeiture; fine. The penalty and forfeit of my bond. Sentence (obsolete) To utter sententiously. Penalty A handicap. Sentence Sense; meaning; ...
What explains the resolution of property tax delinquency prior to forfeiture? Evidence from Hennepin County, MinnesotaReviews in American History 30.1 (2002) 136-140Debra L. Schultz. Going South: Jewish Women in the Civil Rights Movement. New York: New York University Press, 2001. xvix + 228 ...
Guilty Property: A Quantitative Analysis of Civil Asset Forfeiture The objective of this article is to explore how property seized under the federal civil-judicial forfeiture laws for drug law violations is proceeded again... GL Warchol,BR Johnson - 《American Journal of Criminal Justice》 被引量...
What does New York State mean when they say 'open container?' When can you buy alcohol on a Sunday in NYS?