Irreparable - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: irreparableirreparable injury
irreparable injury : serious injury to a party that justifies relief esp. by preliminary injunction called also irreparable damage irreparable harm NOTE: Typical irreparable injury is not remediable by monetary compensation. ...
Irreparability
The quality or state of being irreparable irreparableness...
Irreparable
Not reparable not capable of being repaired recovered regained or remedied irretrievable irremediable as an irreparable breach an irreparable loss...
Irreparable injury
Irreparable injury, in that sense would have established injury which the plaintiff is likely to suffer, Ramdev Food Products (P) Ltd. v. Arvindbhai Rambhai Patel, (2006) 8 SCC 726.Irreparable injury, means only that the injury must be a material one, namely one that cannot be adequately compensated by way of damages, Dalpat Kumar v. Prahalad Singh, AIR 1993 SC 276 (277): (1992) 1 SCC 719 (720). [Civil P.C., (5 of 1908), O. 39, R. 1(c)]...
irreparable
irreparable : impossible to repair, remedy, or undo ir·rep·a·ra·bly adv ...
Irreparableness
Quality of being irreparable...
Irreparably
In an irreparable manner...
death knell exception
death knell exception : a rule of procedure allowing immediate review of an interlocutory order when denial of review would result in irreparable injury ...
injunction
injunction [Middle French injonction, from Late Latin injunction- injunctio, from Latin injungere to enjoin, from in- in + jungere to join] : an equitable remedy in the form of a court order compelling a party to do or refrain from doing a specified act compare cease-and-desist order at order, damage declaratory judgment at judgment, mandamus specific performance at performance, stay NOTE: An injunction is available as a remedy for harm for which there is no adequate remedy at law. Thus it is used to prevent a future harmful action rather than to compensate for an injury that has already occurred, or to provide relief from harm for which an award of money damages is not a satisfactory solution or for which a monetary value is impossible to calculate. A defendant who violates an injunction is subject to penalty for contempt. affirmative injunction : an injunction requiring a positive act on the part of the defendant : mandatory injunction in this entry final injunction : perman...
order
order 1 : a state of peace, freedom from unruly behavior, and respect for law and proper authority [maintain law and ] 2 : an established mode or state of procedure [a call to ] 3 a : a mandate from a superior authority see also executive order b : a ruling or command made by a competent administrative authority ;specif : one resulting from administrative adjudication and subject to judicial review and enforcement [an administrative may not be inconsistent with the Constitution "Wells v. State, 654 So. 2d 145 (1995)"] c : an authoritative command issued by the court [violated a court and was jailed for contempt] cease-and-de·sist order [sēs-ənd-di-zist-, -sist-] : an order from a court or quasi-judicial tribunal to stop engaging in a particular activity or practice (as an unfair labor practice) compare injunction, mandamus, stay consent order : an agreement of litigating parties that by consent takes the form of a court order final order : an order of a court...
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