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Admissions
Admissions contract clause examples

other than for matters involving admissions which would materially prejudice Neuren’s or its Affiliates’ or any Third Party Licensee’s rights in such Neuren IP, the conduct of any Infringement and Invalidity Defence that ACADIA undertakes in accordance with this clause 18.3 shall be controlled by ACADIA in the same manner as an Infringement Defence.

Income, which may include, without limitation, net income, operating income, volume measures (e.g., admissions or visits) and expense control measures, and which and may be calculated or measured before or after income taxes, including or excluding interest, depreciation and amortization, minority interests, extraordinary items and other material non-recurring items, discontinued operations, the cumulative effect of changes in accounting policies and the effects of any tax law changes;

The Parties each acknowledge and agree # that the terms specified in this Agreement are a full and complete compromise of matters involving disputed issues of law and fact; # that neither any party’s agreement to these terms nor any party’s statement made during the negotiations for this Settlement Agreement and Mutual General Release shall be considered, nor shall they be, admissions by any party hereto; and # that no past or present wrongdoing shall be implied or claimed on the part of the parties to this Agreement.

Neuren and/or its Affiliates and any of Neuren’s or its Affiliates’ third party licensees of any of the Neuren IP at issue outside the Territory (“Third Party Licensees”) shall have the right, at their own expense, to be involved in such Infringement and Invalidity Defence as it relates to invalidity issues and ACADIA will make no admissions which would materially prejudice Neuren’s or its Affiliates’ or any Third Party Licensees’ rights in such Neuren IP without the written consent of Neuren, not to be unreasonably withheld;

The following discovery may be conducted by the parties: interrogatories, demands to produce documents, requests for admissions and oral depositions. The arbitrator will resolve any discovery disputes by such pre hearing conferences as may be needed. The Company, RPAC and claimant agree that the arbitrator will have the power of subpoena process as provided by law. Disagreements concerning the scope of depositions or document production, its reasonableness and enforcement of discovery requests will be subject to agreement by the Company and the claimant or will be resolved by the arbitrator. All discovery requests will be subject to the proprietary rights and rights of privilege and other protections granted by applicable law to the Company and the claimant and the arbitrator will adopt procedures to protect such rights. With respect to any dispute, the Company, RPAC and the claimant agree that all discovery activities will be expressly limited to matters directly relevant to the dispute and the arbitrator will be required to fully enforce this requirement.

An indemnifying party’s obligations to indemnity and defend under this Section 9 are expressly conditioned upon, # being provided prompt written notice of any indemnified claim by the indemnified party; provided, that a failure to provide such prompt notice shall not release the indemnifying party from its obligations unless such lack of timely notice materially impacts the ability of the indemnifying party to defend against the claim, # the indemnifying party having the sole right to control the defense, and to agree to any cash settlement, adjustment or compromise of the claim; provided that # any settlement, adjustment, or compromise of the claim shall not result in any financial or non-financial obligations and/or admissions of guilt being imposed on the indemnified party without the prior written consent of the indemnified party in its sole discretion, and # the indemnified party may employ separate counsel at its own expense to participate in the defense of the claim, and # the indemnified party providing reasonable cooperation with the indemnifying party in the defense of the claim. The indemnified party shall have no authority to settle any claim on behalf of the indemnifying party without the consent of the indemnifying party.

Employee, for himself and for his heirs, dependents, assigns, agents, executors, administrators, trustees and legal representatives (collectively, the “Releasors”), promises and agrees to forever waive, abandon and release and discharge , its subsidiaries, affiliates, owners, officers, employees, agents, representatives and all other persons, entities and corporations, from any and all claims, demands, damages, causes of action, attorney fees and expenses of any kind whatsoever, whether known or unknown, which the Releasors ever had, now has or hereafter may have based upon the Employee’s employment or separation of employment with . This promise and agreement specifically includes but is not limited to all claims under common law theories of contract or tort, all claims under federal, state and local statutes, laws, regulations, executive orders and/or ordinances prohibiting discrimination of any kind in employment, such as the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), as amended, Older Worker Benefit Protection Act, Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), as amended, Civil Rights Acts of 1964 or 1991, as amended, or Washington Law Against Discrimination, RCW 49.60, and from all acts, statements and admissions up to the date of this Agreement.

proposed discovery requests satisfy the requirements of these Arbitration Provisions and the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. The receiving party will then be allowed, within five (5) calendar days of receiving the proposed discovery requests, to submit to the arbitrator an estimate of the attorneys’ fees and costs associated with responding to such written discovery requests and a written challenge to each applicable discovery request. After receipt of an estimate of attorneys’ fees and costs and/or challenge(s) to one or more discovery requests, consistent with [subparagraph (c)] above, the arbitrator will within three (3) calendar days make a finding as to the likely attorneys’ fees and costs associated with responding to the discovery requests and issue an order that (i) requires the requesting party to prepay the attorneys’ fees and costs associated with responding to the discovery requests, and (ii) requires the responding party to respond to the discovery requests as limited by the arbitrator within twenty-five (25) calendar days of the arbitrator’s finding with respect to such discovery requests. If a party entitled to submit an estimate of attorneys’ fees and costs and/or a challenge to discovery requests fails to do so within such 5-day period, the arbitrator will make a finding that (A) there are no attorneys’ fees or costs associated with responding to such discovery requests, and (B) the responding party must respond to such discovery requests (as may be limited by the arbitrator) within twenty-five (25) calendar days of the arbitrator’s finding with respect to such discovery requests. Any party submitting any written discovery requests, including without limitation interrogatories, requests for production subpoenas to a party or a third party, or requests for admissions, must prepay the estimated attorneys’ fees and costs, before the responding party has any obligation to produce or respond to the same, unless such obligation is deemed waived as set forth above.

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