Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Finder's fee






Finder's fee

An agent's (as opposed to agency) fee for finding employment or a contract for a writer. The fee is usually 10-15% of the total billed to the employer and is paid either by the employer or the writer.

RELATED TERMS
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Finding
Practice. That which has been ascertained; as, the ruding of the jury is conclusive as to matters of fact when confirmed: by a judgment of the court.

Employment
An employment is an office.

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.

Total
Complete; containing the whole; as the total amount of an account is all the items of such account added together; total incapacity, is an absolute and complete incapacity to do a thing. A married woman is totally incapable to make a contract, because, although having intelligence, she has not legal capacity and an idiot is totally incapable to enter into a contract, because he has no will.

Employer
One who has engaged or hired the services of another. He is entitled to rights and bound to perform duties.



SIMILAR TERMS
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PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
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Final
That which puts an end to anything.

Final decree
A decree which finally decides and disposes of the merits of the whole cause, and reserves no further question or direction for the future judgment of the court, so that it will not be necessary to bring the cause again before the court for decision. Beebe v. Russell, 19 How. 285 (1856); 13 Pet. 15 (1839).

Final judgment
Relitigation of a matter as the result of a judge's decision. it does not become final for purposes of appeal until the expiration of a certain amount of time.

Finances
By this word is understood the revenue, or public resources or money of the state.

Financier
A person employed in the economical management and application of public money or finances; one who is employed in the management of money.

Finder's fee

Finding
Practice. That which has been ascertained; as, the ruding of the jury is conclusive as to matters of fact when confirmed: by a judgment of the court.

Finding a verdict
The act of the jury in agreement upon a verdict.

Fine
"1) A sum of money, which, by judgment of a competent jurisdiction, is required to be paid for the punishment of an offence. 2) The amount paid by the tenant, on his entrance, to the lord. 3) A special kind of conveyance.

Fine for alienation
During the vigor of the feudal law, a fine for alienation was a sum of money which a tenant by knight's service paid to his lord for permission to alienate his right in the estate he held, to another, and by that means to substitute a new tenant for himself. But when the tenant held land of the king, in capite, by socage tenure, he was bound to pay such a fine, as well as in the case of knight service. These fines are now abolished. In France, a similar demand from the tenant, made by the lord when the former alienated his estate, was called lods et vente. This imposition was abolished, with nearly every feudal right, by the French revolution.

Firebote
Fuel for necessary use; a privilege allowed to tenants to take necessary wood for fuel.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.