take

Action/PossessionLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, 'take' refers to the act of acquiring, receiving, or seizing something, often involving a transfer of possession or rights. It denotes an action taken by one party to possess, control, or claim an asset, right, or obligation.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine 'take' as deciding to grab something for yourself. In law, it means deciding to acquire ownership or responsibility over something, like a piece of land or a contractually agreed-upon benefit.

Context in Contracts

It matters because it is central to defining legal obligations, establishing ownership claims in contracts, determining the scope of rights granted, or executing a specific action required by a legal instrument.

Visual model

Understand take fast

An explainer image has not been generated for this term yet.
01

The plaintiff takes possession of the property described in the deed.

02

The contract stipulates that the client takes the necessary action to receive the benefit.

Document context

How take shows up in legal documents

What is it?

The act of acquiring, receiving, or seizing something; the action taken by one party to possess, control, or claim an asset, right, or obligation.

Why does it matter?

It matters because it is central to defining legal obligations, establishing ownership claims in contracts, determining the scope of rights granted, or executing a specific action required by a legal instrument.

When does it matter?

When discussing the transfer of property, the execution of a contract, the taking of evidence, or the taking of possession under a legal claim.

Where is it usually seen?

In legal documents such as deeds, litigation filings, contractual clauses, and statutes where rights are being asserted or transferred.

Who is affected?

Affected parties include litigants asserting a right to take an asset, parties receiving benefits under a contract, or the entity executing a specific action required by a court order.

How does it work?

It works in practice when one party legally obtains something from another party, often involving a transfer of title, a formal acceptance of responsibility, or the execution of a legal duty to acquire an asset.

Share

Send this term to someone else fast

Copy the link, open native sharing, or scan the QR code from another device.

QR code for take

Scan to open this glossary page on another device.

Wikipedia

Take

Take is a single continuous recorded performance. The term is used in film and music to denote and track the stages of production.

Open on Wikipedia

Move from term to document

See the real contract language around this term

A glossary definition helps, but actual risk usually lives in the surrounding clause. Upload the full document and BrieflyGo will map plain-English meaning, red flags, and next steps.

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