missing

Legal TerminologyLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, 'missing' refers to an absence or lack of something that is expected or required within a formal document, claim, or set of requirements. It signifies a deficiency in the scope of an agreement, a procedural step, or a defined obligation.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine a situation where something important is supposed to be there, but it's gone. In law, 'missing' means that a required element, a specific piece of evidence, or a necessary condition has failed to appear in a legal proceeding or contract.

Context in Contracts

It matters because 'missing' often dictates whether a legal claim succeeds or fails; if a crucial element of a contract or statute is missing, the plaintiff might lose their case, or conversely, if an expected item is missing from a list of required actions, it signals a failure in compliance.

Visual model

Understand missing fast

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01

A claim where the plaintiff fails to prove a necessary element of a tort.

02

A regulatory filing where the required environmental permit is missing.

Document context

How missing shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A term indicating that an expected component, requirement, or specified item is absent from a set, a list, or a formal obligation. In litigation, it denotes a deficiency in the claims or evidence presented.

Why does it matter?

It matters because 'missing' often dictates whether a legal claim succeeds or fails; if a crucial element of a contract or statute is missing, the plaintiff might lose their case, or conversely, if an expected item is missing from a list of required actions, it signals a failure in compliance.

When does it matter?

It usually appears when discussing deficiencies in a legal brief, a set of necessary conditions for a transaction, or a deficiency in a regulatory compliance checklist. It highlights where a requirement has failed to be met.

Where is it usually seen?

Found in legal documents such as pleadings, discovery responses, contract clauses, or regulatory filings where the absence of a specific term is noted.

Who is affected?

Affected parties include litigants (who might fail to prove a required element), corporate entities (whose obligations might be missing), and regulatory bodies (whose compliance might be lacking).

How does it work?

Practically, it works by pointing out that an expected term or requirement is absent. For instance, if a contract requires 'indemnification' but the clause for indemnification is 'missing,' the legal analysis shifts to determine the deficiency.

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