adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a contractual obligation (= something that a contract says you must do )
▪
The company must refund your money in line with their contractual obligations.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
agreement
▪
Users have to register, but aren't obliged to enter into a lengthy contractual agreement .
▪
There is no need for any contractual agreement .
▪
Authorities will develop specifications for services and then reach contractual agreements with provider agencies such as voluntary or private organizations.
▪
They invest in the preparation of the site and enter into a contractual agreement to grow free range chickens for.
▪
A contractual agreement about retirement could also affect your statutory rights.
arrangement
▪
Such a situation creates a gravitational pull toward contractual arrangements and a corresponding push away from employment in the traditional sense.
commitment
▪
Anyhow, he had other contractual commitments , so he refused to allow his name to be used.
duty
▪
Nevertheless, there are circumstances in which an employer may be under a contractual duty to provide work.
▪
The job description shall be consistent with the contractual duties laid down in this agreement.
▪
There was, however, no obligation added to the contractual duties imposed on the plaintiff under the original contract.
▪
In the case of exchanges it usually translates into a general contractual duty to act fairly.
▪
Other allegations against the latter suggested a breach of a contractual duty of care, false representations and undue influence.
▪
Liability tended to be seen in terms of contractual duties .
▪
Was there any contractual duty on the defendants to disclose this material fact to the plaintiff?
▪
P1 is not under a contractual duty to tell P2 of any defects he is aware of, unless P2 specifically asks.
liability
▪
The haulier will seek to exclude his contractual liability for certain acts or omissions, just like any other shrewd businessman.
obligation
▪
But Virgin executives are privately convinced that meeting this contractual obligation will be impossible because so many major issues remain unresolved.
▪
Can an employee handbook serve as a basis for contractual obligation ?
▪
Liability for contractual obligations is joint.
▪
At that point, stars and studios fulfill their initial contractual obligation and are free to negotiate with other parties.
▪
As programme manager, Mendoros was responsible for establishing contacts, negotiating requirements and ensuring that contractual obligations were met.
▪
In Washington, for example, a teacher was discharged from his contractual obligation because of his deteriorating eyesight.
▪
To meet its contractual obligations the proportion of the with-profits fund invested in equities will drop.
▪
Section 2f reads: Members must fulfil to the best of their ability the contractual obligations owed to their employer.
relationship
▪
Equally, an obligation may be imposed even where there is no contractual relationship , provided it is obvious from the facts.
▪
It soon became clear that breach of confidence was actionable perse, and did not require a contractual relationship between the parties.
▪
An analysis of the contractual relationship produces the same result and the same consequences.
▪
They have a contractual relationship with the firm, and as long as the contract is honoured they have no additional claim.
▪
First, the contractual relationship between the shipper-consignor and the carrier issuer of the bill controlled subsequently acquired rights.
▪
The unlawful means adopted may be considerably more remote than interference in the contractual relationship between B and his servants.
▪
Both these features give unnecessary complexity to the termination of the contractual relationship .
▪
A court will construe the parties' contractual relationship against its factual background.
right
▪
I have no contractual rights as a woman in my country.
▪
But the defendants insist that the result of an indemnity basis taxation does not correspond with their contractual rights .
▪
They accept, that is to say, that the order of the court and the taxation consequent thereon will effectively quantify their contractual right .
▪
It was held that there was no appropriation because there was no identifiable property, merely a contractual right against the bank.
▪
In such a case you are entitled to keep your contractual rights although many new owners will try to renegotiate these.
▪
Thus, employers are acting within their contractual rights if they require the employees to move.
▪
Typical legal rights are property rights and contractual rights.
▪
But a share is something far more than a mere contractual right in personam.
term
▪
These rights and obligations are called contractual terms .
▪
It may be some special legal word-ing, signature block, advertising message, or contractual term that is used repeatedly.
▪
Sometimes a contractual term lies in a grey area between the two.
▪
The nature of the breach determined the nature of the contractual term .
▪
A prudent employer will always have an express contractual term protecting business secrets.
▪
There was a contractual term dealing with summary dismissal for gross misconduct.
▪
For present purposes, natural justice is therefore treated as an implied contractual term rather than a floating, self-contained principle.
▪
Finally, in determining your base, all relevant contractual terms should be examined.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Carney has a contractual commitment to write two new books in the next four years.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
As it is, the company can not in any case be accounted for as a wholly contractual phenomenon.
▪
At that point, stars and studios fulfill their initial contractual obligation and are free to negotiate with other parties.
▪
Most people's savings are contractual , through pension funds and life assurers.
▪
Similarly, a requirement that the expert observe the rules of natural justice could be made a contractual obligation.
▪
The natural-entity theory had several advantages compared with the contractual and the fiction/concession models of the company.
▪
The nature of the contract, contractual and tortious liabilities and the use of exclusion clauses will be considered.
▪
The second theory of the nature of the company is the contractual one.
▪
Whether the transaction is to be categorised as a sale or exchange is a question of contractual intention.