Permitted Parties definition

Permitted Parties as defined in Section 8.14.
Permitted Parties shall have the meaning given in Article 23.1;
Permitted Parties means the Trading Clients and Service Providers;

Examples of Permitted Parties in a sentence

  • Each party shall treat such information and shall cause its Permitted Parties to treat such confidential information as confidential, and shall preserve the confidentiality thereof, and not duplicate or use such information, except by Permitted Parties.

  • Permitted Parties shall be informed by Recipient of this Agreement and of the confidential nature of the information.

  • The Issuer shall issue a press release which will provide the date and time of any such call and will direct Permitted Parties to contact the investor relations office of the Issuer to obtain access to the conference call.

  • If such tests and/or audits indicate the presence of an Environmental Condition on or about the Leased Premises which occurs due to the acts or omissions of Tenant or its Permitted Parties, Tenant shall, in addition to its other obligations hereunder, reimburse Landlord for the cost of conducting such tests.

  • Owner is willing to grant Entrant and the Permitted Parties a limited right of access to the Premises upon the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement.


More Definitions of Permitted Parties

Permitted Parties means the representatives of an Applicant, an Associated Entity, or the representatives of an Associated Entity and any provider or potential provider of finance (and their representatives) to the Applicants or any Associated Entity in connection with the Letting Proposal (and each a “Permitted Party”);
Permitted Parties has the meaning specified in Section 1009(b).
Permitted Parties has the meaning ascribed to such term in the recitals of this Agreement.
Permitted Parties has the meaning set forth in Section 6.1.
Permitted Parties is defined as Purchaser’s lenders, attorneys, accountants, consultants, contractors, brokers, investors, creditors, officers, employees and agents; and each of such Permitted Parties is a “Permitted Party.” Prior to Closing, Purchaser shall not post (or permit the posting of) any jobs related to the Property and/or this transaction. Purchaser’s obligations, liabilities and duties under this Section 10.8 shall survive the Closing as well as any termination of this Agreement.
Permitted Parties means (a) the full-time members of the formal investment or equivalent committee of any Affiliate of the Shareholder responsible for the oversight of a Holder’s investment in the Company and (b)(i) internal compliance, legal, accounting, tax, insurance and other personnel of a Holder (clauses (a) and (b)(i), collectively, “Internal Permitted Parties”), and (ii) external compliance, legal, accounting, tax and other professional advisors of a Holder or its Affiliates who are bound by an obligation of confidentiality to the Holder or its Affiliate (either in the course of their professional duties or pursuant to a customary confidentiality agreement) (clause (b)(ii), collectively, “External Permitted Parties”), in each case with respect to clauses (a) and (b), who have a need to review information in order to perform the proper functions of their employment or duties to any Affiliate of such Holder
Permitted Parties means: (i) counsel for the Debtor; (ii) officers and employees of the Debtor who are necessary to assist the Debtor and its counsel address issues with respect to sexual abuse claims; (iii) counsel for the Committee; (iv) insurance companies or their successors, including any authorized claim of administrators of such insurance companies, that issued or allegedly issued policies to the Debtor and their reinsurers and attorneys; (v) Epiq; (vi) any mediator, special arbitrator, or claims reviewer appointed by the Court to review and resolve sexual abuse claims; (vii) any trustee appointed to administer payments to Sexual Abuse Claimants; (viii) authorized representatives of a department of corrections with respect to a sexual abuse claim by a Sexual Abuse Claimant who is incarcerated, but only to the extent such disclosure is authorized under applicable non-bankruptcy law; (ix) members of the Committee and their personal counsel (but only after the Sexual Abuse Claim Form has been redacted to remove the Sexual Abuse Claimant’s personal identification information identified in Parts 2(A) and 3 of the Sexual Abuse Claim Form and the signature block); (x) law enforcement in the city or county where the sexual abuse claim arose; (xi) auditors of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops charged with preparing annual audits of diocesan