Injunction: Difference between revisions

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539 bytes removed ,  14 October 2020
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{{g}}The [[injunction]] is an [[equitable]] [[remedy]] that originated in the English [[Courts of chancery|courts of equity]] to provide redress for wrongs for which an award of money [[damages]] doesn’t quite scratch the itch. An [[injunction]] can be given only when there is “no adequate remedy at law.” So, “M’lud I don’t want money. I want him to stop doing what he’s doing, that he promised he wouldn’t.” Obvious examples where this principal is fairly self-evidently so are [[Confidentiality obligation - Confi Provision|confidentiality obligations]].
{{a|contract|}}{{injunction capsule}}
{{injunctions and confidentiality agreements}}
{{injunctions and confidentiality agreements}}


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*{{confiprov|Remedies}} in the context of our lovely [[Confi Anatomy]]
*{{confiprov|Remedies}} in the context of our lovely [[Confi Anatomy]]

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