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Brokerage - Law Dictionary Search Results

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brokerage

brokerage 1 : the business or establishment of a broker 2 : a broker's fee or commission ...


Brokerage

Brokerage, the commission or percentage paid to brokers on the sale or purchase of bills, funds, goods, etc. see CONTRACT NOTE....


Credit-brokerage

Credit-brokerage, means the effecting of introduc-tions (a) of individuals desiring to obtain credit to persons carrying on any business so far as it relates to the provision of credit; or (b) of individuals desiring to obtain goods on hire to persons carrying on a business which comprises or relates to the bailment of goods under a contract for the hire of goods; or (c) of individuals desiring to obtain credit, or to obtain goods on hire, to other credit-brokers, Supply of Goods and Services Act, 1982, s. 18(1) (UK), Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 2, para 1855, p. 873...


Army Brokerage Acts (UK)

Army Brokerage Acts (UK), 5 & 6 Edw. 6, c.16; 49 Geo. 3, c. 126, Acts forbidding the purchase of offices; so called by 38 & 39 Vict. c.16, the Regimental Exchanges Act, 1875...


operations

financial transactions at a brokerage having to do with the execution of trades and keeping customer records...


Fraud

Fraud, a fraud is an act of deliberate deception with the design of securing something by taking unfair advantage of another. It is a deception in order to gain by another's loss. It is a cheating intended to got an advantage, S.P. Chengalvaraya Naidu v. Jagannath, AIR 1994 SC 853 (855): (1994) 1 SCC 1.A term used in a variety of meanings. At Common Law, fraud is actionable under the heading of deceit (q.v.).A knowing misrepresentation of the truth or con-cealment of a material fact to induce another to act to his or her detriment, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 670.In equity and upon the equitable principles which are now applicable in any Court of law, fraud may be described as an infraction of the rules of fair dealing. For the action at law intention and representation (q.v.) are material. In equity an act or its consequences to the person aggrieved may be of greater importance than the intention of the defendant or any representation made to the plaintiff, and the same may b...


Credit-broker

Credit-broker, means a person acting in the course of a business of credit brokerage carried on by him, Supply of Goods and Services Act, 1982, s. 18(1) (UK) Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 2, para 1855, p. 873....


Contract note

Contract note, a short statement of the effect of a contract. The expression is defined ins. 77(3) of the Finance (1909-10) Act, 1910, as follows:--For the purposes of this Part of this Act, the expression contract note' means the note sent by a broker or agent to his principal, or by any person who by way of business deals, or holds himself out as dealing, as a principal in any stock or market-able securities, advising the principal or the vendor or purchaser, as the case may be, of the sale or purchase of any stock or marketable security, but does not include a note sent by a broker or agent to his principal where the principal is himself acting as broker or agent for a principal, and is himself either a member of a stock exchange in the United Kingdom or a person who bona fide carries on the business of a stockbroker in the United Kingdom, and is registered as such in the list of stockbrokers kept by the Commissioners.The same s. imposes stamp duties on contract notes varying with t...


Brocage

Brocage, the wages or hire of a broker; also termed Brokerage, 12 Rich. 2, c. 2....


Brokerage

The business or employment of a broker...


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