pass-through

Legal TerminologyLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, 'pass-through' refers to the mechanism or concept by which an entity (like a corporation, a system, or a process) allows something to pass through a defined boundary, system, or set of rules without being fully integrated into or absorbed by that boundary.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine a rule or a system where something is allowed to go straight through the barrier or rule, rather than stopping or changing its nature. It means letting something pass through a legal structure or defined limit without being stopped or altered by it.

Context in Contracts

It matters in legal documents because it defines the scope of an action or transaction. It specifies whether a required element (like a permit, a right, or a liability) is successfully transferred across a defined threshold, which is crucial for determining compliance and validity under contract law.

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01

A contract where the right of a party to pass through a certain jurisdiction is established.

02

A legal statute defining the scope of an action that passes through a defined regulatory requirement.

Document context

How pass-through shows up in legal documents

What is it?

Pass-through generally denotes a mechanism, process, or entity that allows a substance, data, or entity to move from one defined state or boundary to another, often implying a direct transition where the original form is maintained but the context shifts.

Why does it matter?

It matters in legal documents because it defines the scope of an action or transaction. It specifies whether a required element (like a permit, a right, or a liability) is successfully transferred across a defined threshold, which is crucial for determining compliance and validity under contract law.

When does it matter?

It usually appears when discussing jurisdictional boundaries, system integration, or the transfer of rights/assets where the original form remains intact but moves to a new jurisdiction or operational state.

Where is it usually seen?

It is commonly seen in contracts defining scope limitations, regulatory compliance documents, intellectual property agreements, or legal statutes that delineate the boundary between two distinct legal or operational domains.

Who is affected?

The parties involved—such as the plaintiff, the defendant, the regulator, or the entity being regulated—are affected by it because the pass-through determines whether a necessary element successfully passes through the system or rule set.

How does it work?

Practically, it works when an action or asset moves across a defined legal barrier without interruption. For instance, in a regulatory context, it means a permit is granted for one entity to pass through a specific compliance checkpoint, rather than being rejected by it.

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