promissory estoppel - significado y definición. Qué es promissory estoppel
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Qué (quién) es promissory estoppel - definición

JUDICIAL DEVICE IN COMMON LAW WHERE A COURT MAY PREVENT A PERSON FROM MAKING ASSERTIONS
Promissory estoppel; Equitable estoppel; Detrimental reliance; Promissory Estoppel; Estop; Estoppal; Estopple; Estopped; Issue estoppel; Estoppel by convention; Estoppel by agreement; Reasonable reliance; Entrapment by estoppel

promissory estoppel         
n. a false statement treated as a promise by a court when the listener had relied on what was told to him/her to his/her disadvantage. In order to see that justice is done a judge will preclude the maker of the statement from denying it. Thus, the legal inability of the person who made the false statement to deny it makes it an enforceable promise called "promissory estoppel," or an "equitable estoppel." Example: Bernie Blowhard tells Arthur Artist that Blowhard has a contract to make a movie and wants Artist to paint the background scenery in return for a percentage of the profits. Artist paints, and Blowhard then admits he needed the scenery to try to get a movie deal which fell through and there are no profits to share. Artist sues and the judge finds that Blowhard cannot deny a contract with Artist and gives Artist judgment for the value of his work. See also: estoppel
estoppel         
n.
Bar, impediment.
reasonable reliance         
n. particularly in contracts, what a prudent person would believe and act upon if told something by another. Typically, a person is promised a profit or other benefit, and in reliance takes steps in reliance on the promise, only to find the statements or promises were not true or were exaggerated. The one who relied can recover damages for the costs of his/her actions or demand performance if the reliance was "reasonable." If the promisor says he "owned the Brooklyn Bridge," reliance on that statement is not reasonable. In a complaint the language would read something like: "in reasonable reliance on defendant's statement (or promise), plaintiff did the following:." See also: contract

Wikipedia

Estoppel

Estoppel is a judicial device in common law legal systems whereby a court may prevent or "estop" a person from making assertions or from going back on his or her word; the person being sanctioned is "estopped". Estoppel may prevent someone from bringing a particular claim. Legal doctrines of estoppel are based in both common law and equity. It is also a concept in international law.