clause
Related to clause: subordinate clause
double jeopardy
A legal doctrine which holds that legal action cannot be taken twice against someone for the same offense. Yes, I know there's new evidence linking the chief financial officer to the embezzlement scheme, but he's already been tried for that. If we bring this new evidence against him now, the judge will toss it out as an instance of double jeopardy.
See also: double, jeopardy
grandfather clause
A clause that exempts certain people or businesses from new limitations or restrictions, thus allowing them to continue doing or benefiting from something as they did before. Originally referred to a clause added to the constitutions of some Southern US states that exempted people with relatives that had voted before 1867 from strict new voting requirements, in effect disproportionately limiting the ability of African Americans to vote. No, I still get to pay the reduced rate, thanks to a grandfather clause in my contract.
See also: clause, grandfather
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
(a) grandfather clause
a clause in an agreement that protects certain rights granted in the past even when conditions change in the future. The contract contained a grandfather clause that protected my pension payments against claims such as might arise from a future lawsuit.
See also: clause, grandfather
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
- amendment
- double jeopardy
- fifth
- jeopardy
- idem
- ne bis in idem
- non bis in idem
- prefer against
- prefer charges against (one)
- lawyer up