intervening
51intervening damages — See damages …
52intervening damages — See damages …
53intervening damages — Damages resulting to an appellee from the delay caused by the appeal. Peasely v Buckminster (Vt) 2 Tyler 264, 267 …
54intervening human agency — The instrumentality of man. The antithesis of act of God. Cachick v United States (DC Ill) 161 F Supp 15 …
55intervening lien — A lien which, in point of time or of record comes between other liens or other conveyances or transfers of the same property …
56Sequence, intervening — An intervening sequence is the part of a gene that is initially transcribed from the DNA into RNA (specifically, into the primary RNA transcript) but then is excised (removed) from it when the so called exxon sequences on either side of it are… …
57Theory of intervening opportunities — Stouffer s law of intervening opportunities states that the amount of migration over a given distance is directly proportional to the number of opportunities at the place of destination, and inversely proportional to the number of opportunities… …
58dependent intervening cause — n. In common law, something that happens in between a defendant’s action and its result that occurs as a normal and predictable response to the defendant’s action; usually a dependent intervening cause does not break the chain of causation and… …
59efficient intervening cause — see cause 1 Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …
60efficient intervening cause — An intervening efficient cause is a new and independent force, which breaks the causal connection between the original wrong and the injury, and is the proximate and immediate cause of the injury. Thus, the original negligent actor is not liable… …