- a
relation between sets of
properties or sets of facts. X is said to
supervene on Y if and only if some
difference in Y is
necessary for any difference...
- 1974, pp 178 to 189. As to
supervening impossibility of
performance in
South Africa, see
William Arthur Ramsden,
Supervening Impossibility of Performance...
-
governed by the
Insolvency Act.
Supervening impossibility of
performance takes place where an
event that
occurs (or
supervenes)
after the
contract has commenced...
- the
liberalisations soon
became moot
because EU
agricultural controls supervened. In 2015 and 2016, 69 per cent of the emplo****
workers is
organised in...
-
event does not fall
within the
scope of the
force majeure clause), and a
supervening event prevents performance, it will be a
breach of contract. The law...
-
Bonapartism (French: Bonapartisme) is the
political ideology supervening from
Napoleon Bonaparte and his
followers and successors. The term was used to...
- is lost and when
death takes place. "[T]he
space of time
before death supervenes varies according to the subject. Some have a
greater physiological resistance...
-
Frustration is an
English contract law
doctrine that acts as a
device to set
aside contracts where an
unforeseen event either renders contractual obligations...
-
states (M and M∗) that
supervene on
physical states (P and P∗) respectively. Let M and M∗ be
emergent properties. Let M∗
supervene on base
property P∗....
- God,
while the
beginning of
faith is an act of free will, with
grace supervening only later. The term "semi-Pelagianism", a 16th-century coinage, is considered...