- 1. Adhesion
contract
- A contract where the bargaining power of the parties is so
unequal that the terms are offered on a "take it or leave it"
basis, with no opportunity to negotiate. Insurance policies are an
example. Where there is any ambiguity in the terms of an adhesion
contract, the ambiguity will be interpreted against the person who
wrote the contract and in favor of the reasonable expectations of
the non-drafting party.
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- 2. Agent
- A person authorized by another, called the principal,
to act in his or her name, under his or her direction.
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3. Appellate
courts
- A court, usually consisting of more than one judge, which
reviews the decisions and results of trial courts at the request
of a party. Appellate courts issue written decisions, which
collectively constitute case law or the
common law.
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4. Arbitrator
- A person with whom parties to a dispute contract for the
resolution of a dispute. The decision of the arbitrator may be
advisory or binding, depending upon the agreement. Arbitration is
one form of alternative dispute resolution.
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- 5. Authority
- The rules and restrictions imposed by a principal on an agent,
specifying the conditions and circumstances in which the agent
may act for the principal. Authority can
be expressly granted or can be implied from the circumstances.
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6. Business
corporation
- A "for profit" corporation, organized under Alaska law or
registered to do business under Alaska law.
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7. Case law
- The body of decisions made by appellate courts which
represents interpretations of statutes, regulations and
constitutions. Also known as the "common
law."
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8. Charitable
corporation
- A kind of nonprofit
corporation which exists to support charitable causes, and
whose income is generally exempt from taxation by Federal and
State law. A Section 501(c)(3) charitable corporation is a special
kind of charitable corporation: persons who make donations to a
Section 501(c)(3) charitable corporation are usually entitled to
deduct the amount of their contribution from their gross income on
their personal income tax returns.
The Internal Revenue Code is extremely complex in this
regard.
- 9. Common law
- The decisions of appellate
courts which, collectively, constitute case law. In some
cases, common law fills in the gaps in the meaning and application
of statutes; in other cases, the law is assembled largely or
exclusively from common law. Tort law, in particular, is comprised
largely of case law or common law.
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9. Compensatory
damages
- Damages a wrongdoer is required to pay to a victim to
compensate the victim for the consequences of the wrongdoer's
actions or inactions. There are many different kinds of
compensatory damages, based upon the kinds of injuries that have
been sustained.
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10. Consideration
- In the context of a contract, some right, interest, profit or
benefit accruing to one party or some forbearance, detriment, loss
or responsibility given, suffered or undertaken by the other. The
thing that is exchanged in a contract.
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11. Corporate veil
- The general rule that members of a
nonprofit corporation (and
the shareholders in a for profit corporation) are not liable for
the debts of the nonprofit corporation beyond the extent of any
financial commitment they may have made to the nonprofit
corporation. There are numerous exceptions to the general rule,
and there are also circumstances in which the protection of the
corporate veil may be lost, so-called "piercing the corporate
veil."
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12. Defamation
- Written or oral statements made by one person to another, and
made public ("published"), which tend to bring the character or
reputation of that person into disrepute, or to expose them to
unreasonable personal embarrassment. Defamation is called "libel"
if it is printed and "slander" if it is oral. Truth is an absolute
defense to defamation, and under some circumstances even untruths
may be privileged and immune from liability.
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13. Director
- A person selected by the membership of
a nonprofit corporation or,
if the bylaws so provide, the board of directors, to serve as a
person in charge of the overall policy of a nonprofit corporation,
including the selection of officers.
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14. Donee
- A person receiving a donation; more narrowly, a charitable
organization receiving a gift (or the pledge of a gift) from a
donor.
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15. Donor
- A person making a donation; more narrowly, a person making a
charitable gift to a charitable
organization.
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16. Endorsement
- A provision added to an insurance policy, usually at
additional cost, to provide coverage for a risk not otherwise
covered.
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17. Executive
director
- The person in a nonprofit
corporation ordinarily responsible for management of the
day-to-day affairs of the nonprofit corporation, and responsible
for the implementation of policies set by the board of directors.
The equivalent of a "chief executive officer" in a business
corporation. Not to be confused with a director,
a member of the board of directors of a nonprofit corporation.
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18. Fiduciary
- A special relationship of trust and confidence owed by one
person to another. The relationship imposes a number of special
obligations on the fiduciary, including a duty of due care and a
duty of loyalty. Supreme Court Justice Cardozo, in a famous
quotation, described it as "something more than the ordinary honor
of the marketplace" and instead "the very punctilio of honesty and
forthrightness." A breach of a fiduciary duty exposes the
wrongdoer to liability for punitive
damages and compensatory
damages.
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- 19. Joint and several
liability
- Liability for damages in which the persons liable are each
liable individually for the entire amount of the damages; that is,
the person with the judgment for damages can recover all of the
monies due from the person with the deepest pocket, and force that
person to recover from his or her fellows the amounts due from
them.
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- 20. Libel
- Libel is written defamation; untrue
words written down as opposed to said aloud.
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21. Mediator
- A person with whom parties to a dispute meet, in an effort to
have the mediator assist them in reaching a mutually acceptable
decision. Unlike an arbitrator, the
mediator does not impose a decision on the disputants; rather, he
attempts to help them find a solution acceptable to them.
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22. Members
- In a nonprofit
corporation, the persons who elect the board of directors
of the nonprofit corporation and enjoy such other rights as may be
provided by the articles of incorporation, the bylaws and state
law.
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23. Negligence
- A failure to conform your conduct in a situation to the level
of care expected of the hypothetical reasonable person, where that
failure is the proximate cause of
injury to another.
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- 24. Nonprofit
corporation
- A corporation which is not intended to operate for profit, but
rather is barred by law from making a profit. Not to be confused
with a "charitable
corporation," which is a special kind of nonprofit
corporation.
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25. Officer
- A person, not necessarily a director
or even employee of a nonprofit
corporation, elected by the board of directors to serve as an
appointed agent of the nonprofit corporation.
Most frequently the president, one or more vice-presidents, a
secretary and a treasurer.
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26. Personal
guaranty
- A contract by one person to pay the debt of another in the
event that other person defaults. For example, a promise by a
director of a nonprofit
corporation to pay a bill of the nonprofit corporation if the
nonprofit corporation fails to do so.
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27. Principal
- A person who directs the activities of another, and has
authorized that other person to act in his or her name.
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28. Proximate or legal
cause
- In negligence law, the existence of
a causal relationship between a breach of the duty of care and the
injury suffered by a victim. If the causal relationship is too
attenuated, legal or proximate cause may not be present.
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29. Punitive damages
- An award of money in favor of a victim that is intended to
punish the wrongdoer and not just to compensate the victim. Also
called "exemplary damages." Punitive damages sometimes exceed the
amount of actual damages by a factor of two or three times.
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30. Regulations
- Rules written by administrative agencies to fill in the gray
areas in statutes, develop or implement statutes, or otherwise
clarify statutes.
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- 31. Release
- A written agreement between two persons, by which one agrees
not to sue the other, or to abandon an existing lawsuit, even if
there is no basis for the lawsuit at the time the agreement has
been made.
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32. Respondeat
superior
- Liability of your organization as "master" for the actions or
inactions of a "servant," an employee, agent or volunteer, more
generally called vicarious
liability.
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33. Risk management
- A general term for the various techniques available to an
organization to control and minimize the chance of liability to a
third party. It includes insurance, education, documentation and a
variety of other means. The term includes both risk prevention and
the handling of risk events when they occur.
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34. Slander
- Slander is oral defamation, untrue
words said aloud as opposed to written down.
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35. Stare Decisis
- Lawyer latin: "It stands decided." The common
law rule that, generally, once something has been decided the
courts are not likely to change it. The policy in support of not
changing the rules.
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- 36. Statutes
- Rules written and adopted by elected officials, Congress,
state legislatures, borough assemblies and city councils (usually
called "ordinances" in the latter two cases).
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37. Vicarious
liability
- Liability of your organization for the actions or inactions of
an employee, agent or volunteer,
traditionally called respondeat
superior.
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38. Worker's
compensation
- A state-mandated insurance policy, providing a special kind of
insurance for the benefit of employees killed or injured on the
job or in a job-related activity.
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