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  2. Laches (equity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laches_(equity)

    In certain types of cases (for example, cases involving time-sensitive matters, such as elections), a delay of even a few days is likely to be met with a defense of laches, even where the applicable statute of limitations might allow the type of action to be commenced within a much longer time period. In courts in the United States, laches has ...

  3. County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian Nation of New York State

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/County_of_Oneida_v._Oneida...

    The dissenters noted various historical examples of the Court applying laches to Indian equitable claims, and argued that the doctrine should also be applied to the action of ejectment (which they admitted was an action at law, not equity). [34]

  4. Category:Legal doctrines and principles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Legal_doctrines...

    Doctrine of chances; Doctrine of colourability; Doctrine of equivalents; Doctrine of exoneration of liens; Doctrine of foreign equivalents; Doctrine of indivisibility; Doctrine of inherency; Doctrine of international exhaustion; Doctrine of laches; Doctrine of merger; Doctrine of necessity; Doctrine of non-derogation from grants; Doctrine of ...

  5. Equitable remedy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equitable_remedy

    This includes "he who comes to equity must come with clean hands" (that is, the court will not assist a claimant who is himself in the wrong or acting for improper motives), laches (equitable remedies will not be granted if the claimant has delayed unduly in seeking them), "equity will not assist a volunteer" (meaning that a person cannot ...

  6. Allcard v Skinner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allcard_v_Skinner

    On the other hand, to protect people from being forced, tricked or misled in any way by others into parting with their property is one of the most legitimate objects of all laws; and the equitable doctrine of undue influence has grown out of and been developed by the necessity of grappling with insidious forms of spiritual tyranny and with the ...

  7. Cayuga Indian Nation of New York v. Pataki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cayuga_Indian_Nation_of...

    With respect to the ejectment cause of action, Hall would have held that: "[W]here a plaintiff seeks ejectment damages, rather than restoration of a possession interest, application of the doctrine of laches to such a money damage claim is rarely if ever justified." [27] Hall also would not have applied laches to the trespass cause of action. [28]

  8. Nonintercourse Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonintercourse_Act

    In the case of the Narragansett land claim (D.R.I. 1976), Congress enacted a settlement after the court struck all the defendant's affirmative defenses (laches, statute of limitations/adverse possession, estoppel by sale, operation of state law, and public policy) and denied the state's motion to dismiss on the grounds of sovereign immunity and ...

  9. Laches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laches

    Laches may refer to: Laches (equity), an equitable principle in Anglo-American law; Laches (general) (c. 475 – 418 BC), an Athenian aristocrat; Laches, a Socratic dialogue of Plato; Laches, Bogotá, a neighbourhood (barrio) in Bogotá, Colombia; Laches, the Lache people