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Contracted-out
Contracted-outAn employer can contract out of the state pension scheme by means of an occupational pension scheme. There are strict rules reLating to occupational pension schemes generally and contracting-out. Benefits under a contracted-out scheme must be at least as good as benefits and such schemes must ensure a "guaranteed minimum pension". An occupational pension scheme need not be contracted out. Occupational pension schemes set up by smaller companies are often insured - whereby an insurance company takes over all responsibilities in return for a premium. RELATED TERMS-------------------------------------- Employer One who has engaged or hired the services of another. He is entitled to rights and bound to perform duties. Contract A negotiated oral or written agreement setting forth the terms for an exchange of value between parties (which may be individuals or companies) and under which each party promises to perform an obligation. Certain terms, such as the obligations to be performed and the terms for setting price or compensation must be mutually understood, known in legal lingo as a "meeting of the minds," and promised to by the parties to form a legal contract. State 1) Government. In its most enlarged sense, it signifies a self-sufficient body of persons united together in one community for the defence of their rights, and to do right and justice to foreigners. In this sense, the state means the whole people united into one body politic; and the state, and the people of the state, are equivalent expressions. 2) Condition of persons. This word has various acceptations. If we inquire into its origin, it will be found to come from the Latin status, which is derived from the verb stare, sto, whence has been made statio, which signifies the place where a person is located, stat, to fulfil the obligations which are imposed upon him. Pension A stated and certain allowance granted by the government to an individual, or those who represent him, for valuable services performed by him for the country. Rules English law. The rules of the King's Bench and Fleet are certain limits without the actual walls of the prisons, where the prisoner, on proper security previously given to the marshal of the king's bench, or warden of the fleet, may reside; those limits are considered, for all legal and practical purposes, as merely a further extension of the prison walls. Contracted-out An employer can contract out of the state pension scheme by means of an occupational pension scheme. There are strict rules reLating to occupational pension schemes generally and contracting-out. Benefits under a contracted-out scheme must be at least as good as benefits and such schemes must ensure a "guaranteed minimum pension". An occupational pension scheme need not be contracted out. Occupational pension schemes set up by smaller companies are often insured - whereby an insurance company takes over all responsibilities in return for a premium. Insured Contracts. The person who procures an insurance on his property. Insurance Contracts. It is defined to be a contract of indemnity from loss or damage arising upon an uncertain event. Company An association of a number of individuals for the purpose of carrying on some legitimate business. Return Contracts, remedies. Persons who are beyond the sea are exempted from the operation of the statute of limitations of Pennsylvania, and of other states, till after a certain time has elapsed after their returning. Premium Contracts. The consideration paid by the insured to the insurer for making an insurance. It is so called because it is paid primo, or before the contract shall take effect. SIMILAR TERMS-------------------------------------- Contagious disorders Police, Criminal law. Diseases which are capable of being transmitted by mediate or immediate contact. Contemporaneous exposition he construction of a law, made shortly after its enactment, when the reasons for its passage were then fresh in the minds of the judges, is considered as of great weigh. Contempt of court A act of defiance of court authority or dignity. Contempt of court can be direct (swearing at a judge or violence against a court officer) or constructive (disobeying a court order). The punishment for contempt is a fine or a brief stay in jail. Contentious jurisdiction Ecclesiastical law. In those cases where there is an action or judicial process, and it consists in hearing and determining the matter between party and party, it is said there is contentious jurisdiction, in contradistinction to voluntary jurisdiction, which is exercised in matters that require no judicial proceeding, as in taking probate of wills, granting letters of administration, and the like. Contestatio litis Civil law. The joinder of issue in a cause. Contestation The act by which two parties to an action claim the same right, or when one claims a right to a thing which the other denies; a controversy. Contested divorce A divorce where at least one issue has not been settled before court. the court must decide the issue or issues. Context The general series or composition of a law, contract, covenant, or agreement. Contingency fee A method of payment of legal fees represented by a percentage of an award. Lawyers get paid in one of two ways: either you pay a straight hourly rate as you might pay a plumber or the lawyer might "gamble" and agree to only get paid if the claim is successful and by taking a portion of any award that comes after the filing of the claim. For example, if you go and see a lawyer because, after a medical emergency, your health insurance company refuses to pay your medical bills in violation of their policy, the law firm might say: "no money down. In fact, we don't get paid a cent unless you do. And then, we take one-third off the top of any award you might get." This allows the client to receive legal services without putting any money down and it allows the lawyer to advertise "we don't get paid unless you do." The lawyer associations in some counties prohibit contingency fee arrangements. In those countries that allow them, they are very prevalent in personal injury cases. Contingent What may or may not happen;. what depends upon a doubtful event; as, a contingent debt, which is a debt depending upon some uncertain event. Contingent damages Those given where the issues upon counts to which no demurrer has been filed, are tried, before demurrer to one or more counts in the same declaration has been decided. Contingent estate A contingent estate depends for its effect upon an event which may or may not happen: as an estate limited to a person not in esse or not yet born. Contingent fee An agreement which specifies that the attorney does not get paid unless the client wins the case. this type of arrangement is generally not allowed in divorce and custody cases. Contingent remainder Estates. An estate in remainder which is limited to take effect, either to a dubious and uncertain person, or upon a dubious and uncertain event, by, which no present or particular interest passes to the remainder-man, so that the particular estate may chance to be determined and the remainder never take effect. Contingent use Estates. A use limited in a deed or conveyance of land which may or may not happen to vest, according to the contingency expressed in the limitation of such use. Continual claim English law. When the feoffee of land is prevented from taking possession by fear of menaces or bodily harm, he may make a claim -to the land in the presence of the vares, and if this claim is regularly made once every year and a day, which is then called a continual claim, it preserves to the feoffee his rights, and is equal to a legal entry. Continuance Postponement of a legal proceeding to a later date. Continue The act of postponing a scheduled court hearing to a later time. Continuing consideration A continuing consideration is one which in point of time remains good and binding, although it may have served before to Support a contract. Continuing damages Those which are continued at different times, or which endure from one time to another. Contra Over; against; opposite to anything: as, such a case lays down a certain principle; such other case, contra. Contra bonos mores (United Kingdom) Contrary to good morals. Contra pacem Pleadings. Against the peace. Contra proferentem A rule premised on the belief that if a party is able to stipulate terms, or is the party who writes the contract, then implicitly he occupies the stronger position. To redress the imbalance between the parties, contra proferentem holds that the interpretation that favours the other party will be chosen. Contraband (jail) In the US penitentiary jargon, it includes illegal items, explosives, deadly weapons, drugs, controlled substances, and any item that is controlled, limited or prohibited on the grounds or within the secure perimeter of a correctional facility. Contract A negotiated oral or written agreement setting forth the terms for an exchange of value between parties (which may be individuals or companies) and under which each party promises to perform an obligation. Certain terms, such as the obligations to be performed and the terms for setting price or compensation must be mutually understood, known in legal lingo as a "meeting of the minds," and promised to by the parties to form a legal contract. Contract law The specific area of the legal profession dealing with contracts. Contract makes the law The law aids the vigilant; forces no one to do a vain, useless, or impossible thing; injures no one -- never works and injury; does nothing in vain; regards not trifles; regards equity; always gives a remedy; speaks to all with one mouth -- is no respecter of persons. What is just and right is the law of laws. Contraction An abbreviation; a mode of writing or printing by which some of the letters of a word are omitted. Contractor One who enters into a contract this term is usually applied to persons who undertake to do public work, or the work for a company or corporation on a large scale, at a certain fixed price, or to furnish goods to another at a fixed or ascertained price. Contrafaction Criminal law. Counterfeiting, imitating. In the French law contrafaction (contrefacon) is the illegal reprinting of a took for which the author or his assignee has a copyriglit, to the prejudice of the latter. Contravention French law. An act which violates the law, a treaty or an agreement which the party has made. Contrectation The ability to be removed. Contrefacon French law. Counterfeit. This is a bookseller's term, which signifies the offence of those who print or cause to be printed, without lawful authority, a book of which the author or his assigns have a copyright. Contribution Civil law. A partition by which the creditors of an insolvent debtor divide, among themselves the proceeds of his property, proportionably to the amount of their respective credits. Contribution between joint tortfeasors Where a plaintiff has recovered 100% from tortfeasor-A and there were one or more other defendants at fault, then tortfeasor-A could receive a contribution from the other defendant(s) for their proportionate fault of the damages sustained by the plaintiff in proportion to their fault. Contributions Public law. Taxes or money contributed to the support of the government. Contributory negligence When both parties to a claim for damages arising from tort were at fault, neither party recovered anything. This was the historic common law rule, where even a plaintiff who was only 1% at fault could not collect from the defendant who may have been 99% at fault. It was a very harsh doctrine based on a very strict moral rule of causation that the plaintiff should not profit from his own fault. Contributory negligence, has been replaced in most legal systems by proportionate fault/comparative fault. Controllers Officers who are appointed, to examine the accounts of other officers. Controver Obsolete. One who invents false news. Controversy A dispute arising between two or more persons. Contubernium Civil law. As among the Romans, slaves had no civil state, their marriages, although valid according to natural law, when contr acted with the consent of their masters, and when there was no legal bar to them, yet were without civil effects; they having none except what arose from natural law; a marriage of this kind was called contubernium. It was so called whether both or only one of the parties was a slave. Contumacy Civil law. The refusal or neglect of a party accused to appear and answer to a charge preferred against him in a court of justice. This word is derived from the Latin contumacia, disobedience. Contumax Civil law. One accused of a crime who refuses to appear and answer to the charge. An outlaw. Contusion Medical jurisprudence. An injury or lesion, arising from the shock of a body with a large surface, which presents no loss of substance, and no apparent wound. PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS-------------------------------------- Contra Over; against; opposite to anything: as, such a case lays down a certain principle; such other case, contra. Contra bonos mores (United Kingdom) Contrary to good morals. Contra pacem Pleadings. Against the peace. Contra proferentem A rule premised on the belief that if a party is able to stipulate terms, or is the party who writes the contract, then implicitly he occupies the stronger position. To redress the imbalance between the parties, contra proferentem holds that the interpretation that favours the other party will be chosen. Contract A negotiated oral or written agreement setting forth the terms for an exchange of value between parties (which may be individuals or companies) and under which each party promises to perform an obligation. Certain terms, such as the obligations to be performed and the terms for setting price or compensation must be mutually understood, known in legal lingo as a "meeting of the minds," and promised to by the parties to form a legal contract. Contracted-out Contraction An abbreviation; a mode of writing or printing by which some of the letters of a word are omitted. Contractor One who enters into a contract this term is usually applied to persons who undertake to do public work, or the work for a company or corporation on a large scale, at a certain fixed price, or to furnish goods to another at a fixed or ascertained price. Contrafaction Criminal law. Counterfeiting, imitating. In the French law contrafaction (contrefacon) is the illegal reprinting of a took for which the author or his assignee has a copyriglit, to the prejudice of the latter. Contravention French law. An act which violates the law, a treaty or an agreement which the party has made. Contrectation The ability to be removed. We thank you for using the Juridical Dictionary to search for Contracted-out. If you have a better definition for Contracted-out than the one presented here, please let us know by making use of the suggest a term option. This definition of Contracted-out may be disputed by other professionals. Our attempt is to provide easy definitions on Contracted-out and any other medical topic for the public at large.
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