To be liable for something means to be legally responsible or accountable for it. This could involve being responsible for a debt, an injury caused by negligence, or any other legal obligation. Being liable can lead to legal consequences if the responsibility is not met.
Guilty and Liable both mean that you are responsible by law. However, you are "liable" in civil cases and determined "guilty" in criminal cases. There is also a difference between state (liable) and federal (guilty).
He is liable for the damages caused to the property.
answerable accountable chargeable
No, responder superior is a legal doctrine that holds an employer liable for the actions of their employees if the actions were conducted within the scope of employment. It does not offer full protection from lawsuits, as the employer can still be held responsible for the actions of their employees.
When lawyers write "in lieu," they typically mean "in place of" or "instead of." It indicates that something is being done as a substitute or alternative for something else.
"imminent" refers to something that is about to happen.Immient is possibly a mis-spelling of 'imminent' which means "about to happen "
Something or someone responsible by law.
Something that is liable to happen soon
Liabilities in company means that company is liable to pay something to either creditors or third parties in some future time.
Income tax - everyone is liable but if you work less than about 300 hours a year, you will pay none as that, at minimum wage, is the single person's tax-free allowance. If you mean taxes in general, everyone pays something somewhere.
it means that you are liable (or most likely) to be detained (or arrested/ placed into custody). Hope this helps
no , you are stuck with what you get
legally obligated responsible likely susceptible
Yes
The term severally liable means that a person, company, or place is responsible for the upkeep of an establishment, property, or service. If the person, company, or place is not following the responsibilities they are liable which means they can be sued for money.
You would be liable for damages if you did something outside your scope or something that was deemed inappropriate. Good Samaritan Laws are in place in most states to protect civilians when performing First Aid.
If you knowingly and purposely rigged something to hurt or injure someone, yes, you could be criminally charged.