Garaging Location
The place where a car is usually stored, such as a home’s garage, when it is not in use.
Your Free Online Legal Dictionary • Featuring Black’s Law Dictionary, 2nd Ed.
The place where a car is usually stored, such as a home’s garage, when it is not in use.
Also called Loan/Lease Payoff Coverage, Gap Insurance covers the difference between how much an insurer will pay on a lost, stolen, or totalled vehicle, and how much the insured person still owes
an objection to evidence that does not why the evidence is inadmissible.
a statement made by the defendant claiming the plaintiff has insufficient evidence to justify a suit.
This term applies to things that go in evidence when it has been presented and accepted to be evidence at a trial.
doctrine that applies in most states of the US where a doctor is freed from a malpractice suit when he treats a person in an emergency.
See great bodily harm.
a bond or a stock that is guaranteed by a person who is not the issuer or the stocks or bonds.
These are the types of trade that stifles competition and can lead to a monopoly and deprive the public of the advantages of free competition
phrase found in wills where the deceased leaves his property to a person.
power of the government to limit taxes on states and on the states to limit tax on the government.
a title that is free from doubts and is able to be sold with the knowledge that it is clear and valid.
This term applies to an attorney’s misconduct that may see him lose his license to practice law.
These are the damages and injuries that directly result from an action or the failure to take action of the defendant.
1. This term is often seen in divorce papers and means dereliction of marital duties. 2. Used when a public officer has done things to endanger welfare of the public.
This term applies to the title to a property that the insurance company will insure.
This term is applied to all personal property that is not real estate.
a term that means to be declared innocent, be exonerated and to be dismissed.
crime that is given a greater punishment than is ordinarily given out.
when a debtor transfers title to a trustee who can then liquidate the property to pay creditors.
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