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Declaratory Judgment

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Declaratory Judgment

Statutory remedy for the determination of a Justiciable controversy where the plaintiff is in doubt as to his or her legal rights. A binding adjudication of the rights and status of litigants even though no consequential relief is awarded.

Individuals may seek a declaratory judgment after a legal controversy has arisen but before any damages have occurred or any laws have been violated. A declaratory judgment differs from other judicial rulings in that it does not require that any action be taken. Instead, the judge, after analyzing the controversy, simply issues an opinion declaring the rights of each of the parties involved. A declaratory judgment may only be granted in justiciable controversies—that is, in actual, rather than hypothetical, controversies that fall within a court's jurisdiction.

A declaratory judgment, sometimes called declaratory relief, is conclusive and legally binding as to the present and future rights of the parties involved. The parties involved in a declaratory judgment may not later seek another court resolution of the same legal issue unless they appeal the judgment.

Declaratory judgments are often sought in situations involving contracts, deeds, leases, and wills. An insurance company, for example, might seek a declaratory judgment as to whether a policy applies to a certain person or event. Declaratory judgments also commonly involve individuals or parties who seek to determine their rights under specific regulatory or criminal laws.

Declaratory judgments are considered a type of preventive justice because, by informing parties of their rights, they help them to avoid violating specific laws or the terms of a contract. In 1934 Congress enacted the Declaratory Judgment Act (28 U.S.C.A. § 2201 et seq.), which allows for declaratory judgments concerning issues of federal law. At the state level, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws passed the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act (12 U.L.A. 109) in 1922. Between 1922 and 1993, this act was adopted in forty-one states, the Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Most other states have varying laws that provide for declaratory judgments. Most declaratory judgment laws grant judges discretion to decide whether or not to issue a declaratory judgment.

Further readings

Howard, Davis J. 1994. "Declaratory Judgment Coverage Actions." Ohio Northern University Law Review 13.

West's Encyclopedia of American Law, edition 2. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

declaratory judgment

n. a judgment of a court which determines the rights of parties without ordering anything be done or awarding damages. While this borders on the prohibited "advisory opinion," it is allowed to nip controversies in the bud. Examples: a party to a contract may seek the legal interpretation of a contract to determine the parties' rights, or a corporation may ask a court to decide whether a new tax is truly applicable to that business before it pays it. (See: declaratory relief)

Copyright © 1981-2005 by Gerald N. Hill and Kathleen T. Hill. All Right reserved.
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49-51, All About the Message, LLC Petition for Declaratory Ruling, CG 02-278 (May 16, 2017), https://ecfsapi.fcc.gov/file/10516277901362/Snyder%20FCC%20All%20About%20the%20Message%20Comments%20051617.pdf [https://perma.cc/ACQ4-V5KH] [hereinafter Randall Snyder May 2017 Reply Comments].
Circuit Court focused on the key issues ACA presented in its challenge to the 2015 Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) Declaratory Ruling and Order, including the definition of an auto-dialer, a reasonable manner approach to revocation of consent, and the one-call exemption for reassigned numbers.
(11.) In re Petition for Declaratory Ruling, 24 FCC Red.
Later in 2012, ShipCompliant submitted a petition to the NYSLA describing the Market Place platform and requesting a declaratory ruling that MarketPlace complied with the state's alcoholic beverage laws.
In February 2012, the commission issued a declaratory ruling to put carriers and least-cost routers on notice that failures to route calls properly would be considered a violation of law.
A request for a declaratory ruling has been filed by US investor JC Flowers, the report said citing a separate report by Focus magazine.
State and federal roles--Attorneys General from different states have been concerned about the American Teleservices Association's request of the FCC for a declaratory ruling on exclusive jurisdiction.
Second, the NYS Public Service Commission, in Petition of Nob Hill Apartments (New York State Public Service Commission, Case 90477--Petition by Nob Hill Apartments, a landlord, by Siara Management, Inc., its agent, for a declaratory ruling regarding the applicability of Public Service Law Section 228 to an apartment owner agreement dated April 16, 1980.
A good faith report or disclosure also includes, with respect to patient care, a report regarding any practice, procedure, action or failure to act with regard to patient safety that concerns information regarding a generally accepted standard of care; a law, rule, regulation or declaratory ruling adopted pursuant to law; or compliance with a professional licensure requirement, which report is made without malice or consideration of personal benefit and that the health care worker making the report has reasonable cause to believe is true.
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