0 decided or controlled by law:
statutory obligations
1 decided, controlled, or required by law:
The government wants to increase the turnover threshold above which companies are required to have a statutory audit of their annual accounts.
The Board of Management will submit the annual statutory accounts.
When managing agents are dealing with other people's money, it is vital that this is covered by statutory regulation.
statutory duty/obligations/responsibilities
You have no statutory authority to order anybody to make a refund.
In France everybody is entitled to a statutory 25 days a year holiday.
There is no escape from these charges since they are statutory.
The statutory force of the oath is accomplished by the evocation of these memories in the community which shares them.
Although statutory and practical issues led to reconsideration of redemption payments, a sense of crisis added urgency to the project.
More specific ones include the metaphysical counterparts of theories of constitutional, statutory, and common-law interpretation.
It may seem as if statutory application in familiar, mature legal systems uses many deferential conventions.
Deferential conventions introduce a subtlety and richness into the theory of statutory application that at times mimics applied semantic realism.
This statutory right also included home-help services, transport services, living in service houses and old people's homes.
Nothing in any theory of statutory application-meaning guarantees that every statute has at least some determinate application-meaning at every point in its existence.
Federal regulation thus proceeded without the leverage of statutory law, the stronger of these two regulatory traditions.