substantial part

Legal Definition

A 'substantial part' refers to a significant portion or a considerable amount of something, often used in contracts or legal contexts to denote an essential or material element. In legal documents, it signifies that a specific portion of the whole is legally relevant or required for the agreement's validity.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine 'substantial part' as meaning that a big chunk of the thing being discussed is important enough to matter in the legal sense. It means there is a significant amount—a lot more than just a little bit—that is crucial to the contract or rule.

Context in Contracts

It matters because it establishes the legal threshold for a requirement. In contract law, it helps determine if a condition has been met sufficiently to be considered valid or binding, preventing minor omissions from being treated as substantial failures.

Visual model

Understand substantial part fast

ELI10 illustration for substantial part
01

A contract clause stating that 'a substantial part' of the required performance must be completed before the agreement is deemed valid.

02

In a regulatory context, demonstrating that a 'substantial part' of the necessary safety protocols has been implemented.

Document context

How substantial part shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A portion of something that is significant, essential, or material; often used to indicate that a required element has been met or that an obligation has been substantially fulfilled.

Why does it matter?

It matters because it establishes the legal threshold for a requirement. In contract law, it helps determine if a condition has been met sufficiently to be considered valid or binding, preventing minor omissions from being treated as substantial failures.

When does it matter?

When discussing contractual obligations, statutory requirements, or regulatory compliance where the required scope of action is defined; often used when an obligation is deemed fully executed.

Where is it usually seen?

In legal briefs, contract clauses, regulatory filings, and litigation documents where a specific requirement needs to be met by a significant measure.

Who is affected?

The parties involved in a legal agreement or dispute, particularly the plaintiff, defendant, or regulated entity, who must demonstrate that a required element has been substantially included.

How does it work?

It works by assessing whether the quantity of an action or requirement meets a legally defined threshold; for instance, determining if a certain percentage of the total obligation is met.

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Wikipedia

Substantial part

Substantial part may refer to: Substantial part (Canadian copyright law), concept in Canadian copyright law Substantial part test, test in the United States tax law

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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.