DEMAND
demand,n.1. The assertion of a legal or procedural right.
contingent demand.A demand that cannot be fixed because it depends on the occurrence of a
cross-demand. A party’s demand opposing an adverse party’s demand. See
COUNTERCLAIM; CROSS-CLAIM.
demand in reconvention.See reconventional demand.
incidental demand.Civil law. A plea by which a party other than the plaintiff asserts a claim
that is related to the plaintiff’s suit. • Examples include a cross-claim, a demand against a third
party, an intervention, and a reconventional demand. La. Code Civ. Proc. art. 1031.
legal demand.A lawful demand made by an authorized person.
main demand.Civil law. A plaintiff’s principal or primary claim against one or more
defendants, contained in an original or validly amended pleading. — Also termed principal
demand; principal action.
reconventional demand.Civil law. A plea by which a defendant asserts any claim that it has
against the plaintiff, or any offset against the plaintiff’s claim. • This plea is similar to the
common-law counterclaim.La. Code Civ. Proc. 1061 et seq. — Also termed demand in
2.Parliamentary law. A request, usu. invoking a right, that must be granted on a single
member’s motion. See REQUEST. 3. A request for payment of a debt or an amount due. [Cases:
Bills and Notes 393–399. C.J.S. Bills and Notes; Letters of Credit §§ 97–98, 202, 204–205, 212,
257.]
personal demand.An in-person demand for payment upon the drawer, maker, or acceptor of a
bill or note.
4. In economics, the intensity of buyer pressure on the availability and cost of a commodity
or service.
aggregate demand. 1. The total amount spent on goods and services in an economy during a
specific period. 2. The total demand for a firm’s products and services during a specific period.
derived demand.Product demand that is related to another product’s demand.
demand,vb.1. To claim as one’s due; to require; to seek relief. 2. To summon; to call into
court. [Blacks Law 8th]