Business Definition for: liability
liability
amount payable in dollars (e.g., accounts payable) or future services to be rendered (e.g., warranties payable). The party having the liability is referred to as the debtor. There are various types of liabilities. An actual liability actually exists and has a stated amount (e.g., bonds payable). An
estimated liability
also actually exists, but the amount has to be predicted (e.g., estimated tax liability). These liabilities are booked and are shown in the balance sheet as credit balances under current or noncurrent liabilities, depending upon whether they will be paid in a period of more or less than one year. A
contingent liability
is one that may or may not become due (e.g., notes receivable discounted; a pending lawsuit). A contingent liability is usually footnoted in the financial statement.
liability
claim on the assets of a company or individual-excluding ownership
equity
. Characteristics: (1) It represents a transfer of assets or services at a specified or determinable date. (2) The firm or individual has little or no discretion to avoid the transfer. (3) The event causing the obligation has already occurred.
See also
balance sheet
liability
- General. A legally enforceable claim on the assets of a company, excluding owner's equity, or the property of an individual, calling for a transfer of assets at a determined future date. Also, any item appearing on the right hand side of a double-entry accounting system or balance sheet.
- Banking. The funds owed by a bank, including time deposits and demand deposits, borrowings from a Federal Reserve Bank or other banks, and Federal Funds in the interbank market. Deposit liabilities, representing claims by a bank's customers on the assets of the bank, are the major source of funds for bank lending. Other liability categories include
managed liabilities
or deposits that banks actively solicit from other banks;
brokered deposits
, which usually are certificates of deposit secured through a broker-dealer; and
off-balance sheet liabilities
which are liabilities that are not direct obligations on the issuing bank, but represent contingent obligations that may become payable in the future.
liability
legal obligation to perform or not perform specified act(s). In insurance the concern is with the circumstance in which (1) one party's property is damaged or destroyed, or (2) that party incurs bodily injury as the result of the negligent acts or omissions of another party. Liability insurance is designed to provide coverage for exposure on either a business or a personal basis.
See also
comprehensive personal liability insurance
,
business liability insurance
,
liability, personal exposures
liability
liability
In general: amount owed by an organization or individual, such as the amount owed by advertisers for space or time purchased.
Magazines: issues remaining to be served on all
active
subscriptions. As copies are served, the liability on those subscriptions is reduced and earned income increases at a value equal to the per-copy value of the issues served. Adjustments must be made to the liability amount if a subscription is canceled prior to
expire
or if a canceled subscription is reinstated.
liability
a
debt
or financial obligation. Contrast with
asset
.
Example: One who borrows $75,000 for a
mortgage
loan incurs a liability to repay that loan.
Example: A
general partner
in a
partnership
has a personal liability for debts of the partnership in the event the partnership cannot repay its debt.
a potential loss.
Example: One should purchase sufficient liability insurance to protect against possible legal claims of someone who gets injured on one's property.
Related Terms:
statement showing a company's financial position at the end of an accounting period; also calledStatement of Financial Position. It presents the entity'sasset, liabilityand stockholders' equityIt is classified into major groupings of assets and liabilities in order to facilitate analysis. Examples are current assets, fixed assets, current liabilities, and noncurrent liabilities. The accounting equation for the balance sheet is:
Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders' Equity
The balance sheet is useful to financial statement users because it indicates the resources the entity has and what it owes.
coverage as Part II-homeowners policy on an all risk basis for personal acts and omissions by the insured and residents of the insured's household. Included are sports activities, pet activities, and miscellaneous events such as someone tripping in an insured's cemetery plot.
coverage for liability exposures of a business to include policies covering individual specific areas of a given business or industry, any of which may be subject to liability.
acts or omissions that result in suits against an individual and/or residents of the individual's household for actual or imagined bodily injury and/or property damage to a third party. Exposures include:
- ownership, use, and possession of property concerning: (a) trespass -the obligation is not to render property safe for a trespasser, but one cannot create a death trap or maintain an attractive nuisance, such as a swimming pool, without proper safeguards; (b) licensee-the obligation is not to render property safe for a licensee but to provide adequate warning of any hidden dangers such as quicksand at the side of an approach road; (c) invitation- the obligation is to render the property safe for an invitee's visit. For example, if someone trips on a throw rug, the owner or occupier of the premises can be held liable.
- ownership, use, and possession of a motorized vehicle on or off premises.
- involvement in sports.
- actions of pets.
Referring Terms:
Copyright © 2005, 2000, 1995, 1987 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc., Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright © 2006, 2003, 1998, 1995, 1991, 1987, 1985 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright c 2006, 2000, 1997, 1993, 1990 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright © 2000, 1995, 1991, 1987 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright © 2007, 2000, 1997, 1987, by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright c 2000, 1994, 1987 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright © 2004, 2000, 1997, 1993, 1987, 1984 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.