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What Is Indemnity? Indemnity is a comprehensive form of insurance compensation for damages or loss. When the term indemnity is used in the legal sense, it may also refer to an exemption from liability for damages. Indemnity is a contractual agreement between two parties.
To indemnify means to compensate someone for his/her harm or loss. In most contracts, an indemnification clause serves to compensate a party for harm or loss arising in connection with the other partys actions or failure to act. The intent is to shift liability away from one party, and on to the indemnifying party.
To indemnify means to compensate someone for his/her harm or loss. In most contracts, an indemnification clause serves to compensate a party for harm or loss arising in connection with the other partys actions or failure to act. The intent is to shift liability away from one party, and on to the indemnifying party.
In legal terms, indemnity requires a nondelivering entity to compensate the aggrieved party for losses it incurred or expects to as a result of the nonperformance. An indemnity clause can also act an as exemption from liability from damages, so the wording of the agreement is extremely important.
The provider/indemnitor defends the case and pays any settlements or judgments, despite its innocence. Since the indemnitor performs whether or not its guilty, the indemnity obviously is not a form of damages or liability for wrongdoing. And limits of liability address damages: liability.
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The most common example of indemnity in the financial sense is an insurance contract. For instance, in the case of home insurance, homeowners pay insurance to an insurance company in return for the homeowners being indemnified if the worst were to happen.
To indemnify another party is to compensate that party for losses that that party has incurred or will incur as related to a specified incident.
Put simply, indemnity is a contractual agreement between two parties, where one party agrees to pay for potential losses or damages claimed by a third party.
Indemnification clauses serve a fundamental purpose in MA agreements. An indemnification clause lays out in legal terms how Company A will be compensated by Company B for the losses they suffer after a merger or acquisition occurs.
The most common example of indemnity in the financial sense is an insurance contract. For instance, in the case of home insurance, homeowners pay insurance to an insurance company in return for the homeowners being indemnified if the worst were to happen.

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