Full disclosure definition

Full disclosure means fully informing all PACE enrollees at the time of enrollment that, pursuant to § 32.1-330.3 of the Code of Virginia, PACE plan enrollment can only be guaranteed for a 30-day period.
Full disclosure means disclosure by the Seller to the Purchaser of the material terms, including financial terms, of a Relevant Part of a Shared Business Contract;
Full disclosure means disclosure by the relevant Seller to the Purchaser of the material terms, including financial terms, of a Relevant Part of a Shared Business Contract;

Examples of Full disclosure in a sentence

  • This Agreement is exempt from the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, 15 USC §1701 et seq.

  • The proper execution and delivery of the Vendor Full Disclosure Statement is a condition precedent to Buyer's obligation under this Agreement.

  • Company agrees to execute the Vendor Full Disclosure Statement attached hereto as Exhibit F.

  • The parties further acknowledge and agree that because the construction of the Unit is complete, this Agreement and the sale of the Unit are exempt from the provisions of the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, and both Purchaser and Seller hereby expressly waive any right or provision of this Agreement that would otherwise preclude such exemption.

  • EXHIBIT F Vendor Full Disclosure Statement THE XXXXX XXXXXXX HEALTH SYSTEM CORPORATION PURCHASING POLICY It is the policy of The Xxxxx Xxxxxxx Health System Corporation ("JHHS") to conduct its purchasing activities in accordance with all applicable state and federal laws and regulations regarding the purchasing of goods or services, including, but not limited to, applicable requirements of the Medicare and Medicaid programs.


More Definitions of Full disclosure

Full disclosure means the provision of all documents relevant to a complaint, in the legal sense of the term.
Full disclosure means such disclosure in writing by the advocate and solicitor as would be necessary if the transaction were a trustee transaction;
Full disclosure means an explanation sufficient to apprise the recipient of the potential adverse impact on the recipient, of the matter to which the recipient is asked to consent.
Full disclosure means the making known, pursuant to this rule, District public financing information at a level of detail that is fair, understandable, and reasonable, with notification where details and backup information can be obtained, and this disclosure shall be in good faith as of the date disclosed and is subject to change from time to time pursuant to noticed public hearings and legal procedure.
Full disclosure means fully informing all PACE enrollees at the time of enrollment that,
Full disclosure usually means providing enough detail for a “person skilled in the same or the most clearly related area of technology to construct and operate” the patented object. Strong patent protection is now moving the pendulum away from the concept of “full disclosure” and it is a matter of grave concern for the scientific community. Can information provided by patients acting in the public interest legitimately be considered the intellectual property of a pharmaceutical company? In practice, to support the marketing of their new products, most manufacturers make some of their intellectual property generally available by publishing some of the reports upon which their successful licens1e applications were based. Unfortunately, these reports are not generally representative of all the evidence. A report in 1980 showed that studies submitted in support of applications for new licenses for drugs in which side-effects had been shown were less likely than others to be published. There have been a number of recent instances of suppression of vital information by companies. Clearly, patents have ceased to be a vehicle of dissemination of knowledge and have become the tools to constrain its spread — quite the antithesis of what good science requires.
Full disclosure. No representation or warranty set forth in this Article V, the Geac Disclosure Statement or any certificate to be delivered by Geac at the Closing contains or will contain any material untrue or misleading statement of fact or, to Geac's knowledge, omits or will omit any fact necessary to make the statements contained herein or therein not materially misleading.