Void Agreement - Law Dictionary Search Results
Wages
uncertain event accurately brings out the concept of wager declared void by s. 30 of the Contract Act. Gambling or wagering … employer is liable to pay, if the term of the contract of employment are fulfilled. In other words, they are payments
Arbitration
parties shall pay their own costs in any event is void (s. 12). The Statutes of Limitation apply to arbitration (s. … 'submission' (which term by s. 27, ibid., means a written agreement to submit present or future differences to arbitration, whether an
Lodger
in writing or verbally. An executory verbal agreement may be void by the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 40;
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Tithe Rent-Charge
that Act, for payment of it by the occupier is void, and the occupier ceased to be bound by any such … effected in one of two ways-either by a voluntary parochial agreement, con-firmed by the commissioners, or by the compulsory award of
Compounding
shall be no prosecution of an offender, the agreement is void as being founded on an illegal consideration, see Jones v.
Object
purpose of law, it becomes unlawful and thereby it is void under s. 23 of the Contract Act. S. 23 is … the purpose and design which is the object of the contract, if it is opposed to public policy which tends to
Policy Proof of Interest (P.P.I.) (English)
policy in the absence of an insur-able interest is made void by the Gaming Act, 1845. The Marine Insurance Act, 1906 … Policies) Act, 1909, makes it an offence to effect a contract of marine insurance without an insurable interest.
fatal
is a indefiniteness with the result that the agreement is void "J. D. Calamari and J. M. Perillo"] fa·tal·ly adv
Mutual promises
will support each other, unless one or the other be void; in which case, there being no consideration on the one … case, there being no consideration on the one side, no contract can arise. But if the promise on one side be
Drunkenness
to be unable to understand what he is doing is voidable if the person with whom the contract was made was … Drunkenness, intoxication with strong liquor; habit-ual inebriety. A contract made by a person when so drunk as to be
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