Four-month rule

Definition - Noun
: a rule requiring that an action be taken within four months: as
a  : a rule in some states requiring that a defendant be tried within four months of the arrest, charge, or arraignment
b  : a rule set out in section 9-103(1)(d) of the Uniform Commercial Code that provides a secured creditor four months to perfect a security interest again in the state to which the collateral perfected previously in another state has been moved



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Based on Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law ©2001.
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intrinsic fraud

fraud (as by the use of false or forged documents, false claims, or perjured testimony) that deceives the trier of fact and results in a judgment in favor of the party perpetrating the fraud


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