Lease
A
special kind of contract between a property owner and a person wanting
temporary enjoyment and use of the property, in exchange for rent paid
to the property owner. Where the property is land, a building, or parts
of either, the property owner is called a landlord and the person that
contracts to receive the temporary enjoyment and use is called a tenant.
Legal
custody
A
child custody decision which entails the right to make, or participate
in, the significant decisions affecting a child's health and welfare (compare
with physical custody and joint custody).
Legislation
Written
and approved laws. Also known as "statutes" or "acts."
In constitutional law, one would talk of the "power to legislate"
or the "legislative arm of government" referring to the power
of political bodies (eg: house of assembly, Congress, Parliament) to write
the laws of the land.
Liability
Any
legal obligation, either due now or at some time in the future. It could
be a debt or a promise to do something. To say a person is "liable"
for a debt or wrongful act is to indicate that they are the person responsible
for paying the debt or compensating the wrongful act.
Liberal
construction
A
form of construction which allows a judge to consider other factors when
deciding the meaning of a phrase or document. For example, faced with
an ambiguous article in a statute, a liberal construction would allow
a judge to consider the purpose and object of a statute before deciding
what the article actually means.
License
A
special permission to do something on, or with, somebody else's property
which, were it not for the license, could be legally prevented or give
rise to legal action in tort or trespass. A common example is allowing
a person to walk across your lawn which, if it were not for the license,
would constitute trespass. Licenses are revocable at will (unless supported
by a contract) and, as such, differs from an easement (the latter conveying
a legal interest in the land). Licenses which are not based on a contract
and which are fully revocable are called "simple" or "bare"
licenses. A common example is the shopping mall to which access by the
public is on the basis of an implied license.
Lien
A
property right which remains attached to an object that has been sold,
but not totally paid for, until complete payment has been made. It may
involve possession of the object until the debt is paid or it may be registered
against the object (especially if the object is real estate). Ultimately,
a lien can be enforced by a court sale of the property to which it attached
and then the debt is paid off from the proceeds of the sale.