long creditor

  • 1Long-term liabilities — are liabilities with a future benefit over one year, such as notes payable that mature longer than one year. In accounting, the long term liabilities are shown on the right wing of the balance sheet representing the sources of funds, which are… …

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  • 2Creditor — Creditors redirects here. For the 1889 play by August Strindberg, see Creditors (play). A creditor is a party (e.g. person, organization, company, or government) that has a claim to the services of a second party. It is a person or institution to …

    Wikipedia

  • 3Creditor Reference — The Creditor Reference (also called the Structured Creditor Reference) is an international business standard based on ISO 11649, implemented at the end of 2008. Using Creditor Reference, a company can automatically match its remittance… …

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  • 4Richard Long (MP 1734-1741) — Richard Long (c. 1691 1760) was an English politician. Born in Steeple Ashton, Wiltshire, he was the first son of Richard Long (1668 1730) of Rood Ashton by his first wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Long of Rowden, Chippenham. Educated at the… …

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  • 5property law — Introduction       principles, policies, and rules by which disputes over property are to be resolved and by which property transactions may be structured. What distinguishes property law from other kinds of law is that property law deals with… …

    Universalium

  • 6LIEN — (Heb. שִׁעְבּוּד נְכָסִים, Shibud Nekhasim). The Concept Jewish law enables the creditor to exercise a lien over all the debtor s property, in addition to his remedies against the debtor personally. This lien automatically comes into existence on …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 7South African contract law — is essentially a modernised version of the Roman Dutch law of contract, [1] which is itself rooted in Roman law. In the broadest definition, a contract is an agreement entered into by two or more parties with the serious intention of creating a… …

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  • 8SURETYSHIP — (Heb. עַרְבוּת), one person s undertaking to fulfill the obligation of another toward a third person (called the arev, ḥayyav, and nosheh, respectively). In Jewish law fulfillment of an obligation is secured primarily through the assets of the… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 9Debt settlement — Debt settlement, also known as debt arbitration, debt negotiation or credit settlement, is an approach to debt reduction in which the debtor and creditor agree on a reduced balance that will be regarded as payment in full.[1] Debt settlement is… …

    Wikipedia

  • 10OBLIGATIONS, LAW OF — This law is concerned with the rights of one person as against those of another (jus in personam), as distinguished from the law of property, which is concerned with a person s rights in a chattel or other property as against the world at large… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism