Friendly suit

Friendly suit

In the United States, a friendly suit is most often used when two parties desire or require judicial recognition of a settlement agreement, and so one sues the other despite the lack of conflict between them.

The law condones this practice because there are several benefits to settling a lawsuit as opposed to settling a claim outside of a lawsuit. First, if one of the parties to the claim is a minor, they usually cannot settle the claim without the appointment of a guardian ad litem to review and accept the settlement. Once the suit is filed, and the settlement is reviewed by the ad litem who considers the best interest of the child, after which the parties can then file a joint motion for the court to render judgment, which would then be binding on all parties regardless of their minority.

When there is a judgment, the parties also gain the defense of res judica if sued again on the same topic.

Friendly suits are generally prohibited in the Article III courts of the United States. ["United States v. Johnson", ussc|319|302|1943] In practice, however, friendly suits are rarely explicitly described as such, and they could easily slip into the judicial system through some casual omissions.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • friendly suit — n. A lawsuit brought by parties who agree on a particular settlement but need a judicial decision to make it binding; see also declaratory judgment The Essential Law Dictionary. Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney… …   Law dictionary

  • friendly suit — A suit brought by a creditor against an executor or administrator, being really a suit by the executor or administrator, in the name of a creditor, against himself, in order to compel the creditors to take an equal distribution of the assets.… …   Black's law dictionary

  • friendly suit — A suit brought by a creditor against an executor or administrator, being really a suit by the executor or administrator, in the name of a creditor, against himself, in order to compel the creditors to take an equal distribution of the assets.… …   Black's law dictionary

  • friendly suit — noun a) Where two subsidiaries of the same parent company accidentally sue each other, not realising that they have the same owner. An analogy is friendly fire , where a person accidentally shoots someone on his or her own side. b) Where a person …   Wiktionary

  • friendly suit — Same as amicable action …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • Friendly Versilia — est un projet né en 1998 à l’initiative de l association Arcigay locale pour promouvoir l offre touristique dédiée aux gays et lesbiennes dans la région de Versilia, tout spécialement dans les villes de Viareggio et Torre del Lago. Aujourd hui, c …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Friendly (Farthing Wood) — Friendly is a character from the Farthing Wood series of children s books.Friendly is Fox and Vixen s son. He is probably the only one of the four cubs that does not suit his name. But this is only from what we see. Friendly is a little bit of a… …   Wikipedia

  • suit|or — «SOO tuhr», noun. 1. a man who is courting a woman, especially with a view to marriage: »The princess had many suitors. You think that you are Ann s suitor [but] ... it is you who are the pursued…the destined prey (George Bernard Shaw).… …   Useful english dictionary

  • friendly — /ˈfrɛndli / (say frendlee) adjective (friendlier, friendliest) 1. characteristic of or befitting a friend; showing friendship: a friendly greeting. 2. like a friend; kind. 3. favourably disposed; inclined to approve, help, or support. 4. not… …  

  • User Friendly — This article is about a popular webcomic titled User Friendly. For the term used generically, see Usability. For other uses, see User Friendly (disambiguation). User Friendly …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”