Fixed Charge - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: fixed chargeFixed charge
Fixed charge, is however, on a particular asset or class of assets which the charger cannot deal with free from the charge with consent of the charger, Cosslett (Contractors) Ltd. (in re:), (1998) Ch 495, see also Arthur D Little Ltd. (in administration) v. Ableco Finance, LLC, (2003) LR 217 (Ch): (2002) EWHC 701 (Ch)....
fixed charge
fixed charge : a regularly recurring expense (as rent, taxes, or interest) that must be met when due ...
Overhead charges
Those general charges or expenses in any business which cannot be charged up as belonging exclusively to any particular part of the work or product as where different kinds of goods are made or where there are different departments in a business called also fixed charges establishment charges or in a manufacturing business administration charges selling charges and distribution charges etc...
Floating charge
Floating charge. This term is not a legal term, but it is well understood and is used in Acts of Parliament, e.g., the (English) Finance Act, 1915, s. 27, and may be said to denote a security which is an equitable charge on the assets for the time being of a going concern. It allows of the business being carried on and the property comprised in it being dealt with in the ordinary course of business, until the undertaking charged ceases to be a going concern, or until the creditor in some way or other intervenes, See Government Stock, etc., Co. v. Manila Ry. Co., 1897 AC 86, per Lord Macnaghten.The charge becomes fixed and enforceable by the charges as soon as the company goes into liquidation, even for the purpose of reconstruction [Crompton & Co., 1914, 1 Ch 954]. Under the (English) Companies Act, 1929, s. 88, all floating charges must be registered in the Register of Charges.The subsidiary shares, rather than circulating in the ordinary course of the claimant's business, are part of...
charge
charge 1 a : something required : obligation b : personal management or supervision [put the child in his ] c : a person or thing placed under the care of another 2 : an authoritative instruction or command ;esp : instruction in points of law given by a judge to a jury [conviction…reversed, because of trial court's "W. R. LaFave and A. W. Scott, Jr."] 3 a : an incurred expense b : the price demanded for something (as admission or use) [a finance ] c : a debit to an account ;esp : a debit resulting from unexpected operating expenses [a against earnings] 4 : a formal allegation of an offense or wrongdoing [based on a that was dismissed "National Law Journal"] see also complaint, indictment, information vt charged charg·ing 1 a : to impose a task or responsibility on [was charged with protecting civil rights] b : to command or instruct with authority ;esp : to give a charge to (a jury) [the jury should have been charged on common-law negligence "National Law J...
Hypothecation
Hypothecation [fr. hypotheca, Civ. Law, a pledge in which the pledges retained possession of the thing pledged, as distinguished from pignus, where the possession was transferred to the pledge. See Sand. Just; Sith's dict. of Antiq., tit. 'Pignus'], the act of pledging a thing as security for a debt or demand without parting with the possession. There are few cases, if any, in our law where an hypothecation in the strict sense of the Roman Law exists. The nearest approaches, perhaps, are the cases of holders of bottomry bonds, and of seamen to whom wages are due in the merchant service, who have a claim against the ship in rem. But these are rather cases of liens or privileges than strict hypo-thecations. There are also cases where mortgages of chattels are held valid, without any actual possession by the mortgage, but they stand upon very peculiar grounds, and may be deemed exceptions to the general rule.It means a charge in or upon any movable property, existing or future, created by...
horizontal price-fixing
horizontal price-fixing : a generally illegal arrangement among competitors to charge the same price for an item compare vertical price-fixing ...
Demurrage charges
Demurrage charges, Demurrage charges are levied in order to ensure quick clearance of the cargo from the harbour. They are always fixed in such a way that they would make it unprofitable for importers to use the port premises as a warehouse, Board of Trustees of Port of Bombay v. Jai Hind Oil Mills Co., (1987) 1 SCC 648: AIR 1987 SC 622: (1987) 1 SCR 932....
Floating assets
Floating assets, where there is a fixed charge over assets, such as the subsidiary shares, the fact that the charger is entitled to enjoy the fruits of the asset, such as the distribution rights, should not lead to the charge as it covers those assets being characterized as floating, Atlantic Computer System Plc (in re:), (1992) Ch 505. See also Arthur D Little Ltd. (in administration) v. Ableco Finance LLC, (2003) LR 217 (Ch): (2002) EWHC 701 (Ch)....
lien
lien [Anglo-French, bond, obligation, literally, tie, band, from Old French, from Latin ligamen, from ligare to bind] : a charge or encumbrance upon property for the satisfaction of a debt or other duty that is created by agreement of the parties or esp. by operation of law ;specif : a security interest created esp. by a mortgage assessment lien : a lien that is on property benefiting from an improvement made by a municipality and that secures payment of the taxes assessed to pay for the improvement attachment lien : a lien acquired on property by a creditor upon levy of an attachment car·ri·er's lien : a lien against freight conferring on the carrier the right to retain the property until the amount due is paid charging lien : a lien attaching to a judgment or recovery awarded to a plaintiff and securing payment of the plaintiff's attorney's fees and expenses called also special lien choate lien : a lien that requires no further action to be made enforceable and th...
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