What helps determine that the voucher has supporting obligation documentations prior to certification
Negligence
Nonfeasance
What helps determine that the voucher has supporting obligation documentations prior to certification
Whatever the jury considers reasonable for a person of ordinary care (in the jurisdiction) to have done (or not done) under similar circumstances. If everyone here'bouts knows something oughta be done, then it's the reasonable person standard, even if nobody elsewheres would do it that way.
An error of omission is the failure to take some action that should have been taken by one with comparable knowledge and under under similar circumstances. It essentially equates with the concept of negligence.
An error of omission is the failure to take some action that should have been taken by one with comparable knowledge and under under similar circumstances. It essentially equates with the concept of negligence.
The two main standards of foreseeability are subjective (based upon what the at-fault party actually knew or understood) and objective (measured by what a reasonable person would have known under similar or the same circumstances).
The two main standards of foreseeability are subjective (based upon what the at-fault party actually knew or understood) and objective (measured by what a reasonable person would have known under similar or the same circumstances).
Washout is a synonym for failure. It begins with the letter w.
reasonable means simply not exactly right but close enough
The answer depends upon who is legally liable for causing the collision. Legal liability can arise from violation of a statute or ordinance, or from simple negligence. Negligence is basically the failure to exercise that degree of care that a reasonably prudent person would have used under the same or similar circumstances. In some states the doctrine of comparative negligence is used. This means that it is possible for each party to be found to be partially at fault. In such a case, damages are reduced by the degree to which a person is found to be negligent.
To show that other cases with similar circumstances came to a similar decision