constructive condition

constructive condition
constructive condition see condition

Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. . 1996.

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  • constructive condition — Conditions in contracts which are neither expressed nor implied by the words of the contract but are imposed by law to meet the ends of justice. Restatement, Second, Contracts, No. 226. The cooperation of the parties to a contract is a… …   Black's law dictionary

  • constructive condition — Conditions in contracts which are neither expressed nor implied by the words of the contract but are imposed by law to meet the ends of justice. Restatement, Second, Contracts, No. 226. The cooperation of the parties to a contract is a… …   Black's law dictionary

  • condition — con·di·tion 1 n 1: an uncertain future act or event whose occurrence or nonoccurrence determines the rights or obligations of a party under a legal instrument and esp. a contract; also: a clause in the instrument describing the act or event and… …   Law dictionary

  • condition — A future and uncertain event upon the happening of which is made to depend the existence of an obligation, or that which subordinates the existence of liability under a contract to a certain future event. Provision making effect of legal… …   Black's law dictionary

  • condition — A future and uncertain event upon the happening of which is made to depend the existence of an obligation, or that which subordinates the existence of liability under a contract to a certain future event. Provision making effect of legal… …   Black's law dictionary

  • Constructive notice — also known as the Doctrine of Constructive Notice is a legal fiction used in the law of both common law and civil law systems to signify that a person or entity is legally presumed to have knowledge of something, even if they have no actual… …   Wikipedia

  • Constructive perception — Constructive perception, is the theory of perception in which the perceiver uses sensory information and other sources of information to construct a cognitive understanding of a stimulus. In contrast to this top down approach, there is the bottom …   Wikipedia

  • constructive — in general use means ‘helpful, positive’, as in constructive criticism. In this meaning it is the opposite of destructive. In legal language it is often applied to ‘what in the eye of the law amounts to the act or condition specified’ (OED), and… …   Modern English usage

  • Constructive analysis — In mathematics, constructive analysis is mathematical analysis done according to the principles of constructive mathematics. This contrasts with classical analysis, which (in this context) simply means analysis done according to the (ordinary)… …   Wikipedia

  • constructive — A constructive proof is one that enables one to give an example, or give a rule for finding an example, of a mathematical object with some property. A nonconstructive proof might result in us knowing that an example exists, but having no idea how …   Philosophy dictionary

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