actual damages
A court awards actual damages to the plaintiff for their proven financial losses.
Noun (Legal term): - Compensatory damages for proven losses: "Actual damages" refers to a monetary award intended to compensate a plaintiff for specific, quantifiable financial losses directly resulting from another party's wrongful act. These damages are designed to restore the injured party to the financial position they would have been in had the wrong not occurred, covering only losses that are definitively proven with evidence.
This term is used almost exclusively in legal contexts to distinguish a specific category of financial compensation. - It is typically claimed in civil lawsuits for breaches of contract or torts (e.g., negligence). - The key requirement is that the losses must be real, directly caused by the defendant's actions, and capable of being calculated and proven with reasonable certainty (e.g., through receipts, invoices, or expert testimony). - It contrasts with other types of damages like "punitive damages" (intended to punish) or "nominal damages" (a small sum awarded when a wrong occurred but no substantial financial loss was proven).
- The court awarded the business actual damages to cover the lost revenue from the broken contract.
- Her lawsuit sought actual damages for her medical bills and lost wages following the accident.
- To recover actual damages, the plaintiff must provide documentation proving the exact amount of the loss.
- "Special damages": This is a synonymous term often used interchangeably with "actual damages" in many legal jurisdictions to mean compensation for specific, out-of-pocket financial losses.
- "General damages" vs. "Actual damages": While "actual damages" cover specific monetary losses (e.g., repair costs, lost income), "general damages" compensate for non-monetary harms that are more subjective, such as pain and suffering or loss of reputation, which are inferred from the wrongful act itself.
- Compensatory damages (n): The broader legal category of damages intended to compensate for loss, injury, or harm. "Actual damages" are a primary type of compensatory damages.
- Special damages (n): As noted, often a direct synonym for "actual damages," emphasizing the specific and itemized nature of the losses.
- Compensatory damages (in its specific, monetary sense)
- Special damages
- Pecuniary damages (emphasizing the financial/monetary nature of the loss)
- To award actual damages: The standard verb collocation used when a court or jury decides to grant this type of compensation.
- The jury decided to award the plaintiff actual damages for the destroyed property.
- To prove actual damages: A crucial step in a lawsuit, referring to the plaintiff's burden of providing evidence for their claimed losses.
- The success of the claim hinges on the ability to prove actual damages.
A court awards actual damages to the plaintiff for their proven financial losses.
- (law) compensation for losses that can readily be proven to have occurred and for which the injured party has the right to be compensated