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con·struc·tive /kən-'strək-tiv/ adj: created by a legal fiction: asa: inferred by a judicial construction or interpretationb: not actual but implied by operation of the lawmade a constructive entry when he refused to take the opportunity for a voluntary departure — Harvard Law Review compare actualcon·struc·tive·ly adv
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam-Webster. 1996.
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I
(creative) adjective
advantageous, applicable, causative, contributive, convenient, cooperative, desirable, developmental, effective, effectual, efficient, fabricative, favorable, formative, generative, helpful, important, improving, instrumental, invaluable, operative, originative, practical, productive, profitable, resultant, serviceable, significant, stimulating, suitable, usable, useful, valuable, worthy, yielding
II
(inferential) adjective
apparent, assumable, conceivable, connoted, constructional, implicative, implicatory, implicit, implied, implied in law, in effect, in essence, in practice, indicated, indirect, indirectly meant, inferable, inferred, inferred in law, insinuated, involved, parallel, potential, pragmatic, presumable, presumed, probable, seeming, suggested, supposable, tacit, tacitly assumed, tantamount to, understood, virtual
associated concepts: constructive contempt, constructive contract, constructive control, constructive conversion, constructive delivery, constructive desertion, constructive escape, constructive eviction, constructive force, constructive fraud, constructive gift, constructive intent, constructive knowledge, constructive malice, constructive mortgage, constructive notice, constructive possession, constructive receipt, constructive total loss, constructive trespass, constructive trust, constructively present
III
index
beneficial, causative, interpretive, productive, virtual
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
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n.Implied or inferred; inferred by construing facts in a particular way.
The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell. 2008.
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a legal fiction for treating a situation as if it were actually so. (See also: constructive fraud, constructive eviction, constructive notice, constructive possession)Category: Small Claims Court & Lawsuits
Nolo’s Plain-English Law Dictionary. Gerald N. Hill, Kathleen Thompson Hill. 2009.
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Something that, while not actually true, is imputed by the law to exist or to have occurred and treated as if it were actually so. For example, to say "I'm giving you my car" and to turn over the car keys would probably be considered a constructive delivery of the vehicle itself.See also legal fiction, actual, apparent, impute.-constructive bailment (=>> bailment)-constructive contempt(=>> contempt)-constructive delivery (=>> delivery)-constructive eviction (=>> eviction)-constructive fraud (=>> fraud.-constructive notice (=>> notice)-constructive service (=>> service)-constructive trust (=>> trust)
Webster's New World Law Dictionary. Susan Ellis Wild. 2000.
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That which exists, not in fact, but as a result of the operation of law. That which takes on a character as a consequence of the way it is treated by a rule or policy of law, as opposed to its actual character.
Dictionary from West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005.
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That which exists, not in fact, but as a result of the operation of law. That which takes on a character as a consequence of the way it is treated by a rule or policy of law, as opposed to its actual character.
Short Dictionary of (mostly American) Legal Terms and Abbreviations.
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adj.a legal fiction for treating a situation as if it were actually so. Some examples help to clarify this term: a) although Jeremiah Gotrocks does not have the jewelry in his possession, he has the key to the safe deposit box and the right to enter so he has "constructive possession"; b) although there is no written trust document, George Holder has picked up $10,000 in bearer bonds from the post office box of his niece Tess Truehart, who gave him her post office box combination while she was traveling in Europe-this makes Holder her "constructive trustee."See also: constructive eviction, constructive fraud, constructive notice, constructive possession, constructive trust
Law dictionary. EdwART. 2013.