Betekenis van:
legal fee

legal fee
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a fee paid for legal service

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. This service fee shall be specified in the legal instrument referred to in point 1.4.
    2. The service fee shall be specified in the legal instrument referred to in Article 43(2).
    3. The level of the licence fee is decided jointly by the Länder Parliaments and fixed in the respective legal acts.
    4. ‘credit intermediary’ means a natural or legal person who is not acting as a creditor and who, in the course of his trade, business or profession, for a fee, which may take a pecuniary form or any other agreed form of financial consideration:
    5. In the Decision the Commission sets out the evidence relating to the decision to establish the fee scale, the legal context, and the conduct of the Association that has satisfied the Commission that the decision to establish the scale is a decision of an association of undertakings which has the restriction of competition as its object.
    6. Applications for action lodged before 1 July 2004 shall remain valid until their legal expiry date and shall not be renewed. However, they must be accompanied by the declaration required under Article 6 of the basic Regulation, the model for which is set out in the Annexes to this Regulation. The declaration shall release any deposit and fee payable in the Member States.
    7. Certain provisions of this Directive should apply to natural and legal persons (credit intermediaries) who, in the course of their trade, business or profession, for a fee, present or offer credit agreements to consumers, assist consumers by undertaking preparatory work in respect of credit agreements or conclude credit agreements with consumers on behalf of the creditor.
    8. The Province of Burgenland has been deficiency guarantor for BB and its legal predecessors in virtually unchanged form since 1928. The statutory arrangements for the authority’s guarantor liability came into force on 29 June 1991 and, since then, the Province of Burgenland has received a liability fee for providing the statutory deficiency guarantee.
    9. The legal basis for this assistance is Section 40(1)(2) of the State Broadcasting Treaty (Rundfunkstaatsvertrag) and Section 88(3) of the Media Law of North Rhine-Westphalia, pursuant to which the Land media authorities and, in the present case, LfM are charged with promoting, among other things, the development of the technical infrastructure for broadcasting and projects for new broadcasting technologies out of their share of the licence fee (Rundfunkgebühr).
    10. The legal bases for this assistance are Section 40(1)(2) of the State Broadcasting Treaty and Section 8(1)(8) of the State Media Treaty, pursuant to which the Land media authorities and, in the present case, Mabb are charged with promoting, among other things, development of the technical infrastructure for broadcasting and projects for new broadcasting techniques out of their share of the licence fee.
    11. In contrast, the Commission has not looked into legal changes, which are not a part of the aid measure in question.In relation to individual aid measures, such as licence fees for a public broadcaster, this approach has led the Commission to examine the conditions under which the relevant fee is being used, the reason being that these conditions form an integral part of the aid measure concerned [40].Where the aid measure concerned has consisted of an aid scheme not granted for any particular activity, such as for example public undertakings benefiting from a state guarantee merely because the undertaking is organised as part of the State, the Commission focussed on whether the aid measure itself (the scheme consisting of a State guarantee for all such undertakings) had been subject to substantial changes.
    12. In contrast, the Commission has not looked into legal changes, which are not a part of the aid measure in question.In relation to individual aid measures, such as licence fees for a public broadcaster, this approach has led the Commission to examine the conditions under which the relevant fee is being used, the reason being that these conditions form an integral part of the aid measure concerned [40].Where the aid measure concerned has consisted of an aid scheme not granted for any particular activity, such as for example public undertakings benefiting from a state guarantee merely because the undertaking is organised as part of the State, the Commission focussed on whether the aid measure itself (the scheme consisting of a State guarantee for all such undertakings) had been subject to substantial changes. As in this latter situation the rules pertaining to each aid beneficiary do not form part of the aid measure, the Commission has not looked into the specific rules regulating the activities of the each of the aid beneficiaries.