Home
E-Mail
Latest

Nominal Damages at Legal Glossary

What is it? See damages.

Law Definition Added By: Anthony

The Nominal Damages definition has been viewed 606 Time(s)!




Send To Friends!

If you'd like to send the Nominal Damages definition to yourself or to your friends/colleagues, just enter the e-mail addresses in the boxes below -





We hope you now understand the meaning of Nominal Damages. If you need any more information on this term, please don't hesitate to contact us.

Other Similar Legal Terms:

Law Terms fishing expedition is Legal grasping at straws; the use of pre-trial investigation (discovery) or witness questioning in an unfocused attempt to uncover damaging evidence you can use against your adversary.

Law Terms United States Attorney is The prosecutor in charge of enforcing the federal criminal laws of the United States. The U.S. Attorney can also enforce selected federal civil statutes, such as the Civil Rights Act. U.S. Attorneys are appointed by the President and the job is considered a political plum. Typical cases brought by the U.S. Attorney and Assistant U.S. Attorneys are immigration violations, drug importation, securities fraud and bank robberies. Any offense committed on federal property (such as a military base or national park) may be prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney.

Law Terms proceeds for damaged exempt property is In a bankruptcy proceeding, money collected through insurance, arbitration, mediation, settlement or a lawsuit to pay for exempt property thats no longer exemptible because it has been damaged or destroyed.

Law Terms power of appointment is The legal authority to decide who will receive someone elses property, usually property held in a trust. Most trustees can distribute the income from a trust only according to the terms of the trust, but a trustee with a power of appointment can choose the beneficiaries, sometimes from a list of candidates specified by the grantor. For example, Karin creates a trust with power of appointment to benefit either the local art museum, symphony, library or park, depending on the trustees assessment of need.

Law Terms nolo contendere is A plea entered by the defendant in response to being charged with a crime. If a defendant pleads nolo contendere, she neither admits nor denies that she committed the crime, but agrees to a punishment (usually a fine or jail time) as if guilty. Usually, this type of plea is entered because it cant be used as an admission of guilt if a civil case is held after the criminal trial.