Ex gratia
Ex gratia (/ˌɛks ˈɡreɪʃiə/;[1] also spelled ex-gratia) is Latin for "by favour", and is most often used in a legal context. When something has been done ex gratia, it has been done voluntarily, out of kindness or grace. In law, an ex gratia payment is a payment made without the giver recognising any liability or legal obligation.
Examples of ex gratia payments
Compensation payments are often made ex gratia when a government or organization is prepared to compensate victims of an event such as an accident or similar, but not to admit liability to pay compensation, or for causing the event.
- A company conducting layoffs may make an ex gratia payment to the affected employees that is greater than the statutory payment required by the law, perhaps if those employees had a long and well-performing service with the company.
- An insurance company may make an ex gratia payment to customers where a claim does not meet the terms and conditions but the company chooses to make a voluntary payment out of kindness or compassion, without recognizing any obligation to make such a payment.
- When the USS Vincennes fired upon Iran Air passenger Flight 655 in 1988, killing some 290 individuals, the President of the United States decided that the United States would offer compensation, on an ex gratia basis, to the families of the victims.
- In a more routine context, the document "Suffolk County Council Education: Ex-Gratia Payments for Loss of or Damage to Personal Property"[2] shows how an education authority compensates victims for damage, but without accepting a liability to do so.
- Following the 1994 Black Hawk shootdown incident, on August 26, 1994, the U.S. Department of Defense announced that it would pay U.S.$100,000 in compensation to the families of each of the non-U.S. personnel killed in the friendly-fire incident.
- Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh announced ex-gratia payments of Rs 100,000 (about US$2,000) to the next of kin of those who died in the Mumbai train bombings of 11 July 2006. The injured would be given Rs 50,000 (about US$1,000) each.
- The prime minister of Malaysia, Datuk Seri Abdullah Haji Ahmad Badawi, announced undisclosed ex-gratia payments to the judges that were affected during the 1988 Malaysian Constitutional Crisis in June 2008.
- Malaysia Airlines offered an ex gratia condolence payment of US$5,000 to the families of each passenger aboard the missing (assumed crashed) flight MH370, though those affected have considered the conditions unacceptable and have asked the airline to review them.
- In 2016, the New Zealand government awarded David Bain an ex gratia payment of NZ$925,000. While Bain had been acquitted of murdering his family in a retrial held in 2009, the defence had failed to sufficiently prove his innocence.[3]
References
- ↑ Oxford English Dictionary
- ↑ Suffolk County Council Education: Ex-Gratia Payments for Loss of or Damage to Personal Property
- ↑ Bayer, Kurt; Davison, Isaac (2 August 2016). "No compensation for David Bain; $925,000 ex gratia payment". New Zealand Herald.
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