UIFSA
The American uniform child and spousal support legislation, the
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act already adopted and implemented
by most states and expected to be law throughout the USA soon. It
is the successor of URESA and is a long-arm statutes as it gives
the state which issues the first support order jurisdiction over
the support payor anywhere in the USA for the purposes of varying
that order. For more information, please see http://wwlia.org/us-uifsa.htm
Ultra vires
Without authority. An act which is beyond the powers or authority
of the person or organization which took it.
Unjust enrichment
A legal procedure whereby you can seek reimbursement from another
who bennefitted from your action or property without legal justification.
There are said to be three conditions which must be met before you
can get a court to force reimbursement based on "unjust enrichment":
an actual enrichment or benefit to the defendant, a corresponding
deprivation to the plaintiff, and the absence of a legal reason
for the defendant's enrichment. For example (and only theoretically
as many countries have laws which have modified equity law in some
situations), if you found somebody else's cash and spent it, you
might be sued for reimbursement under unjust enrichment. The legal
theory behind unjust enrichment is the constructive trust, which
the court imposes upon the circumstances to hold the person unjustly
enriched as the trustee for the person who should properly get the
property back, held to be the beneficiary of the constructive trust.
URESA
Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act of the United States,
as created in 1950 by the National Conference of Commissioners on
Uniform State Laws. This was the first family support uniform legislation
in the USA and it was ultimately adopted, in some form or another,
by all the US states. It was updated in 1968 and the revised version
became known as "RURESA", the initial "R" standing
for "Revised." It has been replaced by UIFSA. For more
information, please see http://wwlia.org/us-uifsa.htm
Usufruct
From ancient Roman law (and now a part of many civil law systems),
"usufruct" means the rights to the product of another's
property. For example, a farmer may give a right of "usufruct"of
his land to a neighbor, thus enabling that neighbor to sow and reap
the harvest of that land.
Usury
Excessive or illegal interest rate. Most countries now prohibit
interest rates above a certain level; and rates which exceed these
levels are called "usury".
© Lloyd Duhaime 1994-1999. The researcher-writer of Duhaime's Legal
Dictionary is a lawyer, Lloyd
Duhaime. For the litigious souls out there with no respect for
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Also, the information provided in this document is internationally
copyright protected. "Duhaime's Law Dictionary" does not
cover common English words unless they have a distinct meaning in
the law. If you have a good suggested addition for Duhaime's Law
Dictionary, please e-mail Lloyd
at lloyd@duhaime.org but note that this project is volunteer
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