Exchange Currency

severability

A clause in a contract that allows that any portion of the contract deemed to be unenforcable does not affect the validity of the rest of the contract.

Related information about severability:
  1. Severability - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    In law, severability (sometimes known as salvatorius, from Latin) refers to a provision in a contract which states that if parts of the contract are held to be illegal or ...
     
  2. severability - Legal Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    That which is capable of being separated from other things to which it is joined and maintaining nonetheless a complete and independent existence. The term ...
     
  3. Severability Definition | Investopedia
    A clause in a contract that allows for the terms of the contract to be independent of one another, so that if a term in the contract is deemed unenforceable by a ...
     
  4. Obamacare suffers a severability trainwreck at the Supreme Court ...
    Mar 28, 2012 ... The health-care statute can't be parsed, say conservative justices.
     
  5. The Severability Doctrine - NYTimes.com
    Mar 22, 2012 ... If the court strikes down the health care reform act's individual mandate, the rest of the law should stand.
     
  6. What is severability? definition and meaning
    Definition of severability: A clause in a contract that allows that any portion of the contract deemed to be unenforcable does not affect the validity of the rest of the ...
     
  7. Day Three- Supreme Court Takes On Severability - Forbes
    Mar 28, 2012 ... Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (Photo credit: Wikipedia) It's day three in the marathon ...
     
  8. 'Severability' Debate Falls on Familiar Lines - Law Blog - WSJ
    Mar 28, 2012 ... And on Day 3 of the highest-profile Supreme Court argument in a generation, the justices were back sparring with each other: This time, the ...