Utmost good faith: Difference between revisions

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{{g}}[[Uberrima fides]] (genitive form [[uberrimae fidei]]) (literally, “'''most abundant faith'''”) is a {{t|Latin}} phrase meaning “[[utmost good faith]]" . For our purposes it is a legal doctrine fiercely guarded by the hounds of the Chancery division which relevant to [[insurance contract|insurance contracts]] — meaning you have to disclose everything, and if yuou don’t the contract may be void — and [[employment contract]]s — meaning an employee can’t work for anyone else, and an employer has to show procedural fairness and so on.
{{g}}[[Uberrima fides]] (genitive form [[uberrimae fidei]]) (literally, “'''most abundant faith'''”) is a {{t|Latin}} phrase meaning “[[utmost good faith]]. For our purposes it is a legal doctrine fiercely guarded by the hounds of the Chancery division which relevant to [[insurance contract|insurance contracts]] — meaning you have to disclose everything, and if yuou don’t the contract may be void — and [[employment contract]]s — meaning an employee can’t work for anyone else, and an employer has to show procedural fairness and so on.

Revision as of 23:03, 17 March 2020

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Uberrima fides (genitive form uberrimae fidei) (literally, “most abundant faith”) is a Latin phrase meaning “utmost good faith” . For our purposes it is a legal doctrine fiercely guarded by the hounds of the Chancery division which relevant to insurance contracts — meaning you have to disclose everything, and if yuou don’t the contract may be void — and employment contracts — meaning an employee can’t work for anyone else, and an employer has to show procedural fairness and so on.