failure

Legal TerminologyLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, 'failure' refers to a situation where a required duty or obligation has not been met, resulting in a breach of contract or statutory requirement. It signifies that an expected outcome or necessary action has not occurred as stipulated by the law or agreement.

Plain-English Translation

Failure means something didn't happen when it was supposed to. In law, it means someone missed a key duty or obligation written down in a contract or statute, leading to a legal problem.

Context in Contracts

Failure matters because it forms the basis for legal claims, such as breach of contract or wrongful death/injury claims. It determines liability and establishes whether a party has defaulted on their obligations under a legal framework.

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01

Failure to deliver goods as specified in a contract.

02

Failure of a regulatory body to enforce a required standard.

Document context

How failure shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A failure is the absence of a required result or action specified in a legal document, such as a contractual obligation or a statutory requirement. It denotes that a defined duty has not been performed or achieved.

Why does it matter?

Failure matters because it forms the basis for legal claims, such as breach of contract or wrongful death/injury claims. It determines liability and establishes whether a party has defaulted on their obligations under a legal framework.

When does it matter?

It usually appears when an obligation is missed, a condition is not met, or a required outcome fails to materialize as dictated by the governing statute or contract. This occurs during litigation, compliance checks, or regulatory review.

Where is it usually seen?

Failure is commonly seen in legal briefs, statutes defining liability, regulatory compliance checklists, and contractual clauses detailing performance expectations.

Who is affected?

The affected parties are typically the plaintiff (who suffered a failure) or the defendant (whose duty failed), as well as the regulatory body overseeing the required action. The party whose duty fails is often the subject of the legal action.

How does it work?

In practice, failure manifests when an obligation is unmet, leading to a claim for damages or remedy. It requires demonstrating that a specific duty was breached and that the resulting loss or injury occurred.

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Wikipedia

Failure

Failure

Failure is the social concept of not meeting a desirable or intended objective, and is usually viewed as the opposite of success. The criteria for failure depends on context, and may be relative to a particular observer or belief system. One person might...

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