Reasonable Review definition

Reasonable Review means that the Administrative Agent has had the opportunity and reasonable time to review copies of the definitive documentation for such Indebtedness, which copies have been provided to the Administrative Agent by the Company or its Subsidiaries.
Reasonable Review means the timely review of a doc- ument or record to detect and correct errors which include ambiguous, omitted or incomplete portions of a document or record, or incorrect words, numbers, phrases, legal descriptions, terms or conditions. “Reasonable review” does not include the detection and correction of an error which is not apparent on the face of the document or record, unless the supervising broker knows or has reason to know of the error.

Related to Reasonable Review

  • Review means a financial or operational audit, investigation, inspection or other form of review requested or required by the Funder under the terms of the Enabling Legislation or this Agreement, but does not include the annual audit of the HSP’s financial statements;

  • Reasonable Distance means a distance that has regard to the Employee’s original work location, current home address, capacity of the Employee to travel, additional travelling time, effects on the personal circumstances of the affected Employee, including family commitments and responsibilities and other matters raised by the Employee, or assistance provided by their Employer.

  • Reasonable suspicion means a basis for forming a belief based on specific facts and rational inferences drawn from those facts.

  • Supervisory Review means ongoing clinical case reviews in accordance with procedures developed by ADMINISTRATOR, to determine the appropriateness of Diagnosis and treatment and to monitor compliance to the minimum ADMINISTRATOR and Medi-Cal charting standards. Supervisory review is conducted by the program/clinic director or designee.

  • reasonable measures means appropriate measures which are commensurate with the money laundering or terrorism financing risks;