Legal Dictionary of Pakistan
Quick lookup for English, Urdu, and Latin legal terms used in Pakistani jurisprudence.
Damage
n. Loss or injury to person or property <actionable damage resulting from negligence.
Damages
n. pl. Money claimed by, or ordered to be paid to, a person as compensation for loss or injury <the plaintiff seeks $8,000 in damages from the defendant>. - damage, adj "Damages are the sum of money which a person wronged is entitled to receive from the wrongdoer as compensation for the wrong." Frank Gahan, The Law of Damages 1 (1936).
Nul sans damage avera error ou attaint
No one shall have error or attaint unless there has been damage.
abridgment of damages
The right of a court to reduce the damages in certain cases. Cf. REMITTITUR.
accumulative damages
Statutory damages allowed in addition to amounts available un- der the common law. - Also termed enhanced damages.
accumulative damages.
See DAMAGES.
action in equity. An action that seeks equitable relief, such as an injunction or specific performance, as opposed to damages.
actual damages
An amount awarded to a complainant to compensate for a proven injury or loss; damages that repay actual losses. - Also termed compensatory damages.
actual damages.
See DAMAGES.
added damages
See punitive damages.
added damages.
See punitive damages under DAMAGES.
additional damages
Damages usu. provided by statute in addition to direct damages. ( Additional damages can include expenses resulting from the injury, consequential damages, or punitive damages.
aggravated damages.
see punitive damages under damages.
benefit-of-the-bargain damages
Damages that a breaching party to a contract must pay to the aggrieved party, equal to the amounts that the aggrieved party would have received, including profits, if the contract had been fully performed.
benefit-of-the-bargain damages.
See DAMAGES.
compensatory damages
1 Damages sufficient in amount to indemnify the injured person for the loss suffered. - Often shortened to compensatories. 2. See actual damages.
consequential damages
See DAMAGE
continuing damages
1 Damages arising from the same injury. 2. Damages arising from the repetition of similar acts within a definite period.
criminal damage to property
1. fojucy, destruction, or substantial impairment to the tt~e of property (other than by fire or explosion without the consent of a person having an interest in the property. 2. Injury, destruction, or substantial impairment to the use of property (other than by fire or explosion) with the intent to injure or defraud an insurer or penholder. Cf. ARSON.
damage feasant
n. [fr. French faisant dommage] Hist. Doing damage. 9 This phrase usu. refers to injury to a person's land caused by another person's animals trespassing on the property and eating the crops or treading the grass. By law, the owner of the damaged property could distrain and impound the animals until compensated by the animals' owner. But the impounder had to feed the animals and could not sell or harm them. The term was introduced during the reign of Edward III. - Also spelled damage faisant. - Also termed damnum facientes.
damage rule
See LEGAL-INJURY RULE.
damage-cleer
n. [fr. Latin damns clericorum "clerk's compensation"] Hist. A set fee payable by a plaintiff to the Court of the Common Pleas, King's Bench, or Exchequer before execution on an award of damages. e The fee - later abolished by statute - was originally a gratuity to the court clerks for preparing special pleadings. - Also spelled damage cleere. - Also termed damna clericorum. "Damage cleere, damna clericorum, was assessed by the tenth part in the common pleas, and by the twentieth part in the king's bench and exchequer, of all damages, exceeding five marks, recovered either by verdict, confession, or judgment of the court, in all actions upon the case, covenant, trespass, battery, false imprisonment, dower, and all others, wherein the damages were uncertain, which the plaintiff was obliged to pay to the prothonotary, or chief officer of that court, wherein they were recovered before he could have execution for them. But this is taken away by 17 Car. 2, c. 6." Termes de la Ley 141 (1st Am. ed. 1812).
damages for detention
See noncontract demurrage under DEMURRAGE.
damages for lost expectations
See expectation damages.
damages ultra
See DAMAGES.
damages, mitigation of
See MITIGATION-OFDAMAGES DOCTRINE.
direct damages
See general damages.
discretionary damages
Damages (such as mental anguish or pain and suffering) that are not definitive but are measurable by the enlightened conscience of an impartial juror.
distress damage feasant
The right to seize animals or inanimate chattels that are damaging or encumbering land and to keep them as security until the owner pays compensation.
divided-damages rule
Maritime law. The obsolete principle that when two parties are jointly liable to a third party for a tort, each party is liable for only half the damages. 0 The courts now apply a comparative-negligence standard."For over a hundred years admiralty law embraced the rule of divided damages' in collision cases .... In 1975, in United States v. Reliable Transfer Co., 421 U.S. 397, 95 S.Ct. 1708, 44 L.Ed.2d 251 (1975), the Supreme Court jettisoned that inequitable and illogical rule in favor of proportionate allocation of fault
double damages
Damages that, by statute, are twice the amount that the fact-finder determines is owed, or twice the amount of actual damages awarded. ( In some cases, double damages are awarded in addition to actual damages, so the effect is the same as treble damages.
enhanced damages
1 See accumulative damages. 2. Patents. Damages for patent infringement in an amount up to three times that of compensatory damages, at the discretion of the court, based on the egregiousness of the defendant's conduct, including the willfulness of the infringement.
estimated damages
See liquidated damages.
excess damages
Damages awarded to an insured - beyond the coverage provided by an insurance policy - because the insurer did not settle the claim within policy limits. ( If the insurer acted in bad faith in not settling, the insured may have a claim to recover the excess damages from the insurer. - Also termed excess-liability damages.
excess-liability damages
See excess damages under DAMAGES.
excessive damages
A jury award that grossly exceeds the amount warranted by law based on the facts and circumstances of the case; unreasonable or outrageous damages, which are subject to reduction by remittitur. See REMITTITUR.
exemplary damages
See punitive damages.
expectancy damages
See expectation damages under DAMAGES.
expectation damages
Compensation awarded for the loss of what a person reasonably anticipated from a transaction that was not completed. - Also termed expectancy damages; loss-of-bargain damages; lost-expectation damages; damages for lost expectations. "[I]f a person contracts to buy a new car, and then changes his mind overnight and cancels the contract, the seller is in principle entitled to recover his anticipated profit on the transaction even though he has not, at the time of the cancellation, done anything whatever in pursuance of the contract. A person who books a room in a hotel would in theory be liable to pay for the hotel's loss of profit even though he cancels in sufficient time for the hotel to be able to relet the room, so long only as the room in fact remains unlet because there are no takers. Damages of this kind are often called damages for lost expectations, or 'expectation damages', or 'loss of bargain damages'." P.S. Atiyah, An Introduction to the Lour of Contract 310 (3d ed. 1981).
fee damages
Damages awarded to the owner of abutting property for injury caused by the construction and operation of an elevated railroad. 0 The term is used because the damage is to the property owner's easements of light, air, and access, which are parts of the fee.
foreseeable damages
Damages that a breaching party knew or should have been aware of when the contract was made.
future damages
Money awarded to an injured party for an injury's residual or projected effects that reduce the person's ability to function. ( Examples are expected pain and suffering, loss or impairment of earning capacity, and projected medical expenses.general damages. Damages that the law presumes follow from the type of wrong complained of. ( General damages do not need to be specifically claimed or proved to have been sustained. - Also termed direct damages; necessary damages.
future damages.
See DAMAGES.
general damages
See DAMAGES.
hedonic damages
Damages that attempt to compensate the loss of the pleasure of being alive. ( Such damages are not allowed in most jurisdictions.
hedonic damages.
See DAMAGES.
imaginary damages
See punitive damages.
imaginary damages.
See punitive damages under DAMAGES.
inadequate damages
Damages insufficient to fully and fairly compensate the parties; damages bearing no reasonable relation to the plaintiff's injuries, indicating prejudice, mistake, or other fact to support setting aside a jury's verdict.
incidental damages
See DAMAGES.