Subject Document definition

Subject Document means any one of such Subject Documents.
Subject Document means all of the Finance Documents, the Shipbuilding Contracts, the Additional Works Contracts, the Refund Guarantees, the Letters of Credit, the Purchase Documents and the Approved Management Agreements (none to be amended, varied, supplemented or modified without the consent of the Security Trustee) and together with any other instruments, document or memorandum, scheduled to any of the documents referred to above, and any notice, consent or acknowledgement referred to in or required pursuant to any of the documents referred to above and any document, instrument or memorandum which secures any of the obligations of the Borrowers under any of the Finance Documents or under any other Subject Document;
Subject Document means any of the Subject Documents.

Examples of Subject Document in a sentence

  • In applying such principles, a court, among other things, might limit the availability of specific equitable remedies (such as injunctive relief and the remedy of specific performance), might not allow a creditor to accelerate maturity of debt or exercise other remedies upon the occurrence of a default deemed immaterial or for non-credit reasons or might decline to order a debtor to perform covenants in a Subject Document.

  • The enforceability of any provision in any Subject Document to the effect that rights or remedies are not exclusive, that every right or remedy is cumulative and may be exercised in addition to any other right or remedy, that the election of some particular remedy does not preclude recourse to one or more others or that failure to exercise or delay in exercising rights or remedies will not operate as a waiver of any such right or remedy.

  • The inclusion of such provisions, however, does not render any Subject Document invalid as a whole, and each of the Subject Documents contains, in our opinion, adequate remedial provisions for the ultimate practical realization of the principal benefits purported to be afforded by such Subject Document, subject to the other qualifications contained in this opinion letter.

  • Any provision in any Subject Document to the effect that rights or remedies are not exclusive, that every right or remedy is cumulative and may be exercised in addition to any other right or remedy, that the election of some particular remedy does not preclude recourse to one or more others or that failure to exercise or delay in exercising rights or remedies will not operate as a waiver of any such right or remedy.

  • Each of the Original Note and the other Subject Documents, as amended hereby, is hereby ratified and confirmed in all respects, and all references to the “Note” in the Original Note or any other Subject Document shall mean the Original Note, as amended hereby.

  • The execution, delivery and performance of the Certificate of Designations, the Agreement and the Registration Rights Agreement (the “Subject Documents”) by the Company has been duly authorized by all necessary corporate action, and to the extent governed by Applicable Law, the Company has duly executed and delivered each Subject Document.

  • This waiver applies irrespective of any law or any provision of a Subject Document to the contrary.

  • The Borrower has the organizational power and authority to execute, deliver and perform the terms and provisions of each Subject Document and has taken all necessary organizational action to authorize the execution, delivery and performance thereof.

  • The enforceability of any agreement of the Borrower in a Subject Document relating to (i) indemnification, contribution or exculpation from costs, expenses or other liabilities or (ii) changes in the organizational control or ownership of the Borrower, which agreement (in the case of clause (i) or clause (ii)) is contrary to public policy or applicable law.

  • In applying such principles, a court, among other things, might limit the availability of specific equitable remedies (such as injunctive relief and the remedy of specific performance), might not allow a creditor to accelerate maturity of debt or exercise other remedies upon the occurrence of a default deemed immaterial or for non‑credit reasons or might decline to order a debtor to perform covenants in a Subject Document.