verify

Legal TermLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

The process of establishing the accuracy or truth of a statement, claim, or evidence, often through inspection, testing, or formal review to confirm its validity under legal scrutiny.

Plain-English Translation

It means checking something to see if it's true or correct. In law, it means making sure that what someone says or shows is actually accurate and reliable so the court accepts it as real evidence.

Context in Contracts

It matters because 'verify' is essential for establishing the truth in litigation, ensuring that facts presented by one party are accepted by the court and that contractual obligations are met according to the agreed-upon terms.

Visual model

Understand verify fast

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

Verifying the authenticity of a signed document to prove its validity in court.

02

Verifying the accuracy of an inventory count before concluding a commercial dispute.

Document context

How verify shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A formal process of checking or proving that a statement, claim, or piece of evidence is accurate, true, or valid under legal scrutiny; often involving inspection or testing to confirm its validity.

Why does it matter?

It matters because 'verify' is essential for establishing the truth in litigation, ensuring that facts presented by one party are accepted by the court and that contractual obligations are met according to the agreed-upon terms.

When does it matter?

When a legal document requires confirmation of accuracy, such as verifying the authenticity of a signature, verifying the validity of a contract clause, or verifying the truthfulness of testimony presented in court.

Where is it usually seen?

In legal pleadings, discovery documents, contractual agreements, and regulatory filings where the factual basis for a claim needs to be confirmed.

Who is affected?

Affected parties include litigants (parties involved in a lawsuit), attorneys preparing evidence, regulatory bodies reviewing compliance, and parties who need to confirm the validity of a transaction or agreement.

How does it work?

It works by systematically checking the data or testimony against established standards to ensure that the presented facts align with the legal requirements or contractual obligations being asserted.

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 verify

Scan to open this glossary page on another device.

Wikipedia

E-Verify

E-Verify

E-Verify is a United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) website that allows businesses to determine the eligibility of their employees, both U.S. and foreign citizens, to work in the United States. The site was originally established in 1996 as the...

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.