without prejudice

Legal TermLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

Without prejudice is a formal declaration that the communication or action taken has been made without prejudice to the claims or rights of the party making the statement, often used in legal correspondence to indicate that the sender is not asserting a specific claim or right at that time, thereby preserving their potential for future litigation.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine you are talking about something important in a court case. Saying 'without prejudice' means you are saying this thing now, but it doesn't mean you are claiming a specific win yet; it just means the action taken is done without damaging your right to sue later on.

Context in Contracts

It matters because it preserves the sender's right to sue or assert a claim later. It clarifies that the current communication is not an assertion of a specific legal right, which is crucial for preserving potential future litigation opportunities.

Visual model

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01

A lawyer sending a letter stating 'Without Prejudice to any claim for damages.'

02

A party in a settlement agreement indicating that an offer made is 'without prejudice' to the underlying legal rights.

Document context

How without prejudice shows up in legal documents

What is it?

Without prejudice is a formal declaration used in legal correspondence to indicate that a communication or action has been taken without prejudice to the claims, rights, or interests of the party making the statement.

Why does it matter?

It matters because it preserves the sender's right to sue or assert a claim later. It clarifies that the current communication is not an assertion of a specific legal right, which is crucial for preserving potential future litigation opportunities.

When does it matter?

It usually appears in legal correspondence, pleadings, or formal notices where a party wants to communicate information or propose an action without committing to a specific claim or liability at that moment.

Where is it usually seen?

It is typically found in legal documents, correspondence between opposing parties, settlement offers, and formal notices within litigation or contractual disputes.

Who is affected?

The party making the statement (e.g., the plaintiff or claimant) is affected by it, as their potential for future claims is preserved; the opposing party is also affected because they are now explicitly acknowledging that the current communication does not prejudice their own rights.

How does it work?

In practice, it functions as a legal safeguard. When one party sends a letter stating 'without prejudice,' it signals to the receiver that the sender's right to sue or assert a claim is being preserved, ensuring that the action taken now doesn't accidentally waive future claims.

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Wikipedia

Prejudice (legal term)

Prejudice is a legal term with different meanings, which depend on whether it is used in criminal, civil, or common law. In legal context, prejudice differs from the more common use of the word and so the term has specific technical meanings. Two of the most...

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