Yes, a contract can violate a law if its terms or conditions go against existing legal regulations or statutes.
The state laws will be applied over and above the contract. A contract cannot violate the law at any level of jurisdiction.
Yes. Federal law, state law and even municipal law prevail over negotiated contracts. A contract that requires one party to violate the law (e.g. a contract for an assassination), or relies on a concept invalidated by law (e.g. a contract for the sale of a slave) is unenforceable. Any law suit for breach of such a contract would be dismissed as soon as the violation of the applicable law was demonstrated. This is common to all jurisdictions based on British common law.
ViolateA sentence for the word violate is: It's smart not to violate the law.
There is no law, but usually the fine print in your cellular plan agreement covers replacement of your device and the requirement to return the defective device. While there is not a law that specifically addresses this case, by signing that contract with the requirement outlined, you have entered into a binding contract and is is covered for civil penalties if you violate the contract.
Law enforcement, as such, does not violate the bill of rights. Violations come from errors or malfeasance on the part of the enforcers.
no Nothing violates that law.
If the fulfillment of the contract would violate fundamental rights, or to continue the contract would be detrimental to the health, life and or property of one of the participants of the contract.
no Nothing violates that law.
An oral contract can be legal. The agreement cannot violate the statute of frauds, which requires writing for certain agreements.
Because dismissals are the most important kinds of charges reps will work. It is important that reps know the differences between what CONTRACTS prohibit employers doing and what STATUTES prohibit, since unions have ZERO role in enforcing statutes. A dismissal could violate the contract and not the law, or the law but not the contract or both or neither.
Go turn your self in! :)
To transgress or exceed the limits of; violate;infringed a contract; infringed a patent.