unenforceable Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˌʌn.ɪnˈfɔː.sə.bəl]
  • Us [ ˌʌn.ɪnˈfɔːr.sə.bəl]

Meaning of unenforceable In English

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Examples of unenforceable

  • Unfortunately, where storage and pumping capacity are limited and non-riparian water rights unenforceable, banking is not practical.

  • The unenforceable law is hardly qualified to be an institution, but the practice of bribing corrupt law enforcers does qualify.

  • Although the government had a time-honored policy against squatting, it was clearly unenforceable.

  • A contract to steal a car should be unenforceable, because car theft should be discouraged.

  • It may be that in 1668-9 he did attempt more general restrictions on music that were extensively flouted and therefore became unenforceable.

  • High information, monitoring and transaction costs, lack of collateral following unenforceable property rights, and moral hazard problems all contribute to absent or malfunctioning credit markets in these economies.

  • A propertybased analysis of pregnancy would explain why surrogacy contracts are unenforceable, and why the couple who have commissioned the surrogacy cannot coerce the surrogate during pregnancy.

  • Since these arrangements could usually not bear scrutiny on many other grounds, rendering such contracts unenforceable in a court of law was equivalent to no punishment at all. 40.

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May 10, 2021

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