exceed

Legal TerminologyLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, 'exceed' refers to the act of going beyond a limit, boundary, or established standard, often resulting in a breach or violation. It signifies that a quantity, scope, or requirement has been surpassed, leading to a legal consequence or deviation from the expected norm.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine you have a rule about how much you can use of something—if you use more than that allowed amount, then 'exceed' means you went too far beyond the limit set by the rules.

Context in Contracts

It matters because 'exceed' establishes the extent of a violation, a failure to meet a required standard, or a transgression against a defined scope in a legal document. It is crucial for determining liability and assessing the severity of a legal infraction.

Visual model

Understand exceed fast

An explainer image has not been generated for this term yet.
01

A contract clause stating that if the required performance metric is exceeded by 20% over the baseline expectation.

02

A regulatory filing where the actual emissions exceed the permitted limit set by the environmental statute.

Document context

How exceed shows up in legal documents

What is it?

Exceed is a term used to denote that a quantity, scope, or measure has surpassed a defined limit, threshold, or requirement. In legal contexts, it signifies a breach of a contractual obligation or statutory limitation.

Why does it matter?

It matters because 'exceed' establishes the extent of a violation, a failure to meet a required standard, or a transgression against a defined scope in a legal document. It is crucial for determining liability and assessing the severity of a legal infraction.

When does it matter?

It usually appears when discussing limits on resources (e.g., budget, capacity), contractual obligations (e.g., performance thresholds), or regulatory compliance where a requirement has been surpassed.

Where is it usually seen?

Exceed is commonly seen in contracts, statutes, regulatory compliance documents, litigation filings, and legal briefs where the scope of an action or liability is being defined.

Who is affected?

The parties involved—such as the plaintiff, defendant, regulator, or contract counterparty—are affected by the concept of 'exceed' because their actions lead to either meeting or exceeding a stipulated requirement.

How does it work?

In practice, it works by comparing an actual result against a defined benchmark. If the actual result is greater than the benchmark (e.g., 'exceeding' the allowed amount), this triggers a legal consequence, such as penalty, claim for damages, or a finding of breach.

Share

Send this term to someone else fast

Copy the link, open native sharing, or scan the QR code from another device.

QR code for exceed

Scan to open this glossary page on another device.

Wikipedia

Exceed

Exceed may refer to: Exceed, enterprise software produced by Hummingbird Ltd. eXceed, a video game series by Nyu Media Exceed, a fictional race of anthropomorphic winged cats in the manga and anime series Fairy Tail Exceed, a brand of sports drink See also...

Open on Wikipedia

Move from term to document

See the real contract language around this term

A glossary definition helps, but actual risk usually lives in the surrounding clause. Upload the full document and BrieflyGo will map plain-English meaning, red flags, and next steps.

Disclaimer: We do not provide legal advice. We translate legal language into plain English and help you prepare for a conversation with a lawyer.