View Full Version : Government definition of an "Individual"
juddfinn
16-12-2009, 08:55 PM
Consumer Credit Act 2006
2006 CHAPTER 14
1. Definition of “individual”
Agreements regulated under the 1974 Act etc.
In section 189(1) of the 1974 Act (definitions) for the definition of “individual” substitute—
“‘individual’ includes—
(a) a partnership consisting of two or three persons not all of whom are bodies corporate; and
(b) an unincorporated body of persons which does not consist entirely of bodies corporate and is not a partnership;”.
:eek:
WHAT THINK YE OF THEM APPLES?
pleasuredome
16-12-2009, 10:19 PM
Consumer Credit Act 2006
2006 CHAPTER 14
1. Definition of “individual”
Agreements regulated under the 1974 Act etc.
In section 189(1) of the 1974 Act (definitions) for the definition of “individual” substitute—
“‘individual’ includes—
(a) a partnership consisting of two or three persons not all of whom are bodies corporate; and
(b) an unincorporated body of persons which does not consist entirely of bodies corporate and is not a partnership;”.
:eek:
WHAT THINK YE OF THEM APPLES?
well, it certainly has nothing to do with ONE single body does it? and in relation to what i have said before, individual = indivisible duality, its not far off the mark. B would be what they refer to us as imo.
yozhik
16-12-2009, 10:45 PM
well, it certainly has nothing to do with ONE single body does it? and in relation to what i have said before, individual = indivisible duality, its not far off the mark. B would be what they refer to us as imo.
'body of persons' is plural and was defined as more than two in some judicial ruling I read many moons ago and did not take note of.
rosix
16-12-2009, 11:04 PM
'body of persons' is plural and was defined as more than two in some judicial ruling I read many moons ago and did not take note of.
I hear a lot about these persons man.. where do they live? I sure know a lot of people but no persons! They sound like they have dull lives.. all these nonsensical rules?!
pleasuredome
16-12-2009, 11:13 PM
'body of persons' is plural and was defined as more than two in some judicial ruling I read many moons ago and did not take note of.
that must make everyone an indivitriple then :D
freemanpete
17-12-2009, 12:40 AM
ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense [indivisible] ): from medieval Latin individualis, from Latin individuus, from in- ‘not’ + dividuus ‘divisible’ (from dividere ‘to divide’ ).