Sentences with phrase «serious breach of your contract»

PLAYMOBIL is entitled to exclude participants from the competition at any time in the event of a serious breach of contract.
Regarding Accountability, we represent two Mexican corporations in unrelated service fields, both of which suffered from unlawful conducts that resulted in a serious breach of contract from continued non-payment events in the first case (topping USD$ 400 million over 2 + years), and in the inability to continue operating as an on - going concern in the second case.

Not exact matches

If they do, they could face serious legal consequences for breach of contract.
And — with 30B in debt; nearly 40B in grossly overstated Goodwill & Intangibles; an ongoing investigation by the US Justice Department; a serious probe by the SEC coupled with a possible breach of contract with Walmart leaves me with a valuation / share of not more than $ 10 - 15.
This is not business and it is not just one or two publishers «fighting» with Amazon, characterizing a serious case of breach of contract by Amazon as childhood squabbles.
A breach of contract after a nondisclosure agreement has been established is a serious problem, and if you've suffered because of someone else's loose lips, there are a few legal remedies available to you.
When deciding whether the breach was repudiatory, the EAT held the question was not dependent on whether it is fair to change the terms of the contract, but on whether the contract was broken in a sufficiently serious way.
(14 day trial; Construction contract; project management; claims alleging fraudulent misappropriation, deceit, breach of fiduciary duty, dishonest assistance and professional negligence against designers / project managers; claim for an account; all serious allegations against Marc Beaumont's client dismissed).
On learning of the conviction and friendship, the local authority held a disciplinary hearing where it was decided that Reilly had committed a serious breach of an implied term of her contract of employment amounting to gross misconduct.
Ms Reilly was suspended and later summoned to a disciplinary meeting to answer an allegation that, in having failed to disclose her relationship with a man convicted of sexual offences towards children, she had committed a serious breach of an implied term in her contract of employment, which amounted to gross misconduct.
Thus, with no new releases and with breach of the previous contracts, the market went through a serious crisis of liquidity in 2017, with strong reduction of cash flow and a significant increase of its inventories.
The latter held that the liability of a contracting authority for the breach of EU public procurement rules under the remedies directive is assimilated to that of the State under the general EU law doctrine of State liability and thus requires a sufficiently serious breach (Nuclear Decommissioning Authority).
In ET v Rocky Mountain Play Therapy Institute Inc, 2016 ABQB 299 (CanLII), the claimant was subject to an enhanced costs award against him of $ 18,000 for making «serious unfounded allegations» (at para 9) against the respondents and their counsel in an interlocutory proceeding related to his claim for breach of contract, defamation and negligence.
Where there is evidence that an employee may have committed a serious breach of his or her employment contract or may be guilty of gross misconduct, it may be possible for the company to terminate that person's employment with immediate effect.
Where an employee is in serious breach of the labour contract or in serious violation of work rules.
It will be good news for contracting authorities that not all breaches of procurement law will give a right to claim damages, and that a challenging bidder must first show that a breach was «sufficiently serious».
It seems to me strongly arguable that in the circumstances of a case such as this, where the employer discovers that the employee has been in serious breach of duty and in breach of good faith, and then discovers that the employee is tied effectively to a rival already... then the employer has, even if he keeps the contract alive, no obligation to provide work; that obligation to provide work being interdependent with the obligation of the employee to act loyally.»
A repudiatory breach of contract is one that is so serious that it entitles the innocent party to the contract to terminate it.
But this justification is problematic: while there is clearly a risk the employee might have committed previous breaches of contract, can the employer fairly be described as having taken the risk the employee will have committed a serious fraud against them, such that it is reasonable to require the employer to carry out their side of the bargain?
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