TIME BAR
Stoppage put on exercising a claim or judgment after a period that was established by a law or custom.
Your Free Online Legal Dictionary • Featuring Black’s Law Dictionary, 2nd Ed.
Stoppage put on exercising a claim or judgment after a period that was established by a law or custom.
Document showing hours worked by an employee.
Vessel or vehicle used for transporting for a fixed time period and the number of trips. See voyage charter.
Length of time needed for a plan or project to be completed in, success of an endeavour, yields from investments, right to mature etc.
Period way back in time where there is no recollection or record to prove a custom, right or claim. In UK a statute of the year 1275 saying that time before King
Measurement determining how a company affords to pay its expenses of operation.
Provision of a contract expressing the need for a timely completion.
Limits time length the insurer can claim that the insured’s condition was pre-existing that wasn’t mentioned at time insurance began.
Customer order setting a time limit after which the order will be cancelled.
Length of time an insured has in order to put in a claim.
A short term, 1 to 6 months, asset based loan for business payable in one instalment on date of maturity.
Distribution and allocation of time is based on priority structuring.
Number of calendar days or the fixed date stated in a contract to complete the work involved. See date of substantial completion.
Provision requiring immediate claim payments or within a certain number of days.
Space of time that has an established date of beginning and ending.
Money related to capital gains and income from an investment.
Concept of accounting where a firm’s operating cycle is divided into separate accounting periods that can be reported on in a manner that is timely.
Activity schedule based an a time scale. See time phasing.
Spread of tasks, activities over an appropriate time scale for the completion of a project.
Insurance policy covering risks that arise in a set period of time.
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