Penal Law at Law Glossary
What is it? see criminal law.Legal Definition Added By: Sophia
The Penal Law definition has been viewed 619 Time(s)!
Send To Friends!
If you'd like to send the Penal Law definition to yourself or to your friends/colleagues, just enter the e-mail addresses in the boxes below -We hope you now understand the meaning of Penal Law. If you need any more information on this term, please don't hesitate to contact us.
Other Similar Law Terms:
Legal Term Donation is A gift of money or valuable items with no expectation of receiving anything in return.Legal Term ADJOURN, ADJOURNMENT is The postponing of a proceeding. For example, a Judge may postpone a proceeding for one month to allow time for the parties to discuss settlement or the affidavits.
Legal Term Exclusive licensee is The party to whom a trademark owner grants an exclusive license to use a trademark.
Legal Term Judgment is The official final decision of a court about the rights and claims of each side in a lawsuit. If your divorce includes an order for money to paid by one side to the other as part of the property division, you may want to be sure that your final decree is also a judgment so that you can use collection procedures to get the money if the person does not comply with the order.
Legal Term Gray-market goods (Parallel Imports) is These are goods that are manufactured abroad for sale in foreign countries and properly marked with trademarks registered in the United States. Later these goods are purchased and imported into the United States to compete with the United States trademark owners or licensees own products. There is considerable incentive to sell gray-market goods in the United States if the prices on goods sold abroad are substantially lower than those sold in the United States. The interesting dilemma created by gray-market goods is that there is ostensibly no trademark infringement since the mark does in fact represent the true source of the goods to which the mark is affixed. For this reason, Congress passed 19 U.S.C. 1526 to address the problem by stopping such imports at the border, with a couple exceptions. If the foreign manufacturer who affixes the mark to the goods is a related company (i.e. subsidiary or brother -sister company) to the United States trademark owner, then 19 U.S.C. 1526 will not prohibit the importation. The statute will also not prohibit the importation of goods that are purchased by an individual in a foreign country and brought into the United States for personal use and not for resale.