different between liabilities vs equity

liabilities

English

Noun

liabilities

  1. plural of liability

Noun

liabilities

  1. (finance) An amount of money in a company that is owed to someone and has to be paid in the future, such as tax, debt, interest, and mortgage payments.
  2. (accounting) The right side of a balance sheet.

Translations

liabilities From the web:

  • what liabilities means
  • what liabilities go on a balance sheet
  • what liabilities are on a balance sheet
  • what liabilities are created by the payroll process
  • what liabilities are considered debt
  • what liabilities are current liabilities
  • what liabilities does an incorporator have
  • what liabilities are not debt


equity

English

Alternative forms

  • æquity (archaic, poetic)
  • equitie (archaic)

Etymology

Attested in 14th century; from the 13th century Old French equite, from Latin aequitas (uniformity; impartiality; fairness). Doublet of equality.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /??k.w?.ti/

Noun

equity (countable and uncountable, plural equities)

  1. Fairness, impartiality, or justice as determined in light of "natural law" or "natural right".
  2. (law) Various related senses originating with the Court of Chancery in late Medieval England
    1. (law) The power of a court of law having extra-statutory discretion, to decide legal matters and to provide legal relief apart from, though not in violation of, the prevailing legal code; in some cases, a court "sitting in equity" may provide relief to a complainant should the code be found either inapplicable or insufficient to do so.
      • 1800, Lloyd Kenyon, 1st Baron Kenyon in Mayor, &c. of Southampton v. Graves (1800), 8 T. R. 592.
        A Court of equity knows its own province.
      • 1851, Edward Sugden, 1st Baron St Leonards in Birch v. Joy (1851), 3 H. L. C. 598:
        "A Court of equity interposes only according to conscience."
      • 1848-55, Thomas Babington Macaulay, History of England, Chapter IX:
        Equity had been gradually shaping itself into a refined science which no human faculties could master without long and intense application.
    2. (law) A right which accrues to a party in a transaction because of the nature of the transaction itself, and which is exercisable upon a change of circumstances or conditions; in other words, an equitable claim.
      • 1999, In Re Fitzgerald, 237 B.R. 252, 261 (Bkrtcy. D.Conn. 1999):
        "...the mortgagor retains ‘equitable title’ or the ‘equity of redemption’….The equity of redemption permits the mortgagor to regain legal title to the mortgaged property upon satisfying the conditions of the mortgage..."
      • 1826, James Kent, Commentaries on American Law
        The wife's equity does not, according to the adjudged cases, attach, except upon that part of her personal property in action which the husband cannot acquire without the assistance of a court of equity
    3. (law, England) The body of law which was developed in the English Court of Chancery, which Court had extra-statutory discretion, and is now administered alongside the common law of Britain.
  3. (finance) Various senses related to net value
    1. (law, finance) Value of property minus liens or other encumbrances.
    2. (business) Ownership, especially in terms of net monetary value of some business.
    3. (accounting) Ownership interest in a company as determined by subtracting liabilities from assets.
    4. (poker) A player's expected share of the pot.
  4. (nonstandard) Equality

Translations

References

  • Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “equity”, in Online Etymology Dictionary

equity From the web:

  • what equity investment
  • what equity loan
  • what equity should i ask for
  • what equity means to me
  • what equity in business
  • what equity really means in schools
  • what equity is not
  • what equity looks like
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