sufficient

Legal TerminologyLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

Sufficient refers to a degree or amount that is adequate to meet the required standard, threshold, or requirement set forth in a legal document or statute. In a legal context, it signifies that the necessary level of proof, evidence, or capacity has been met to satisfy a legal claim or obligation.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine 'sufficient' means having enough good stuff—like enough evidence or enough money—to win a legal argument or meet a rule. It means the amount is big enough to be valid under the law.

Context in Contracts

It matters because it determines whether a legal action, claim, contract enforcement, or regulatory compliance is valid. If the requirement is 'sufficient,' the legal argument succeeds; if it's not sufficient, the claim fails.

Visual model

Understand sufficient fast

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01

A plaintiff demonstrating sufficient proof to meet the elements of a claim for damages.

02

A regulatory filing showing sufficient evidence to demonstrate compliance with environmental standards.

Document context

How sufficient shows up in legal documents

What is it?

Sufficient is a term used in legal documents to indicate that the required standard, threshold, or necessary quantity of something (such as proof, capacity, or authority) has been met to satisfy a legal claim or obligation.

Why does it matter?

It matters because it determines whether a legal action, claim, contract enforcement, or regulatory compliance is valid. If the requirement is 'sufficient,' the legal argument succeeds; if it's not sufficient, the claim fails.

When does it matter?

It usually appears when discussing the adequacy of evidence presented in a lawsuit, the capacity of a party to enter into a contract, or whether a certain level of proof meets the legal standard required by a statute.

Where is it usually seen?

It is commonly seen in pleadings, legal briefs, regulatory compliance checks, and contractual clauses where the requirement for adequate performance or standing is defined.

Who is affected?

The parties involved in litigation, regulatory bodies assessing compliance, and legal counsel analyzing the validity of a claim.

How does it work?

In practice, it means that the evidence presented is strong enough to establish a legal fact, or that the capacity of a party to perform an obligation is adequate to satisfy the contract terms. It requires meeting the minimum threshold defined by the law.

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Wikipedia

Sufficient statistic

In statistics, sufficiency is a property of a statistic computed on a sample dataset in relation to a parametric model of the dataset. A sufficient statistic for a model parameter contains all of the information that the dataset provides about that parameter....

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