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Glossary
U.S. Attorney
A lawyer appointed by the President in each judicial district
to prosecute and defend cases for the federal government. The
U.S. Attorney employs a staff of Assistant U.S. Attorneys who
appear as the government's attorneys in individual cases.
UIFSA
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, the successor of URESA
(which see). The uniform child and spousal support legislation
already adopted and implemented by most states and expected to
be law throughout the USA soon. It is a long-arm statute,
giving the state which issues the first support order
jurisdiction over the support payor anywhere in the USA for
the purposes of varying that order
Ultra vires
Literally, without authority. An act which is beyond the power
or authority of the person or organization taking it.
Unjust enrichment
A legal procedure which seeks reimbursement from one who
benefits from another's action or property without legal
justification. This is based on the legal theory of the
constructive trust, which the court imposes upon the
circumstances to hold the person unjustly enriched as trustee,
and the person who should properly get the property back as
beneficiary of the constructive trust. A court may not force
reimbursement based on "unjust enrichment" unless these three
conditions are met: defendant receives an actual enrichment or
benefit; a corresponding deprivation is suffered by the
plaintiff; and the absence of a legal reason for the
defendant's enrichment
URESA
Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act of the United
States, as created in 1950 by the National Conference of
Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. This was the first family
support uniform legislation in the USA and it was ultimately
adopted, in some form or another, by all the US states. It was
updated in 1968 and the revised version became known as "RURESA",
the initial "R" standing for "Revised." It has been replaced
by UIFSA.
Usufruct
From ancient Roman law (and now a part of many civil law
systems), "usufruct" means the rights to the product of
another's property. For example, a farmer may give a right of
"usufruct" of his land to a neighbor, thus enabling that
neighbor to sow and reap the harvest of that land.
Usury
An excessive or illegal interest rate. Most countries now set
a limit on interest rates and prohibit interest rates above a
certain level. Rates which exceed these levels are called
"usury".
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