Dictionary Definition
acquiescence
Noun
1 acceptance without protest
2 agreement with a statement or proposal to do
something; "he gave his assent eagerly"; "a murmur of acquiescence
from the assembly" [syn: assent]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Compare French acquiescenceNoun
- A silent or passive assent or submission, or a submission with apparent content; - distinguished from avowed consent on the one hand, and on the other, from opposition or open discontent; quiet satisfaction.
- Submission to an injury by the party injured, or tacit concurrence in the action of another.
Related terms
Translations
- Polish: potulność , przyzwolenie
- Spanish: aquiescencia
Extensive Definition
Acquiescence is, the term used to describe an act
of a person in knowingly standing by without raising any objection
to infringement of his rights, when someone else is unknowingly and
honestly putting in his resources under the impression that the
said rights actually belong to him. Consequently, the person whose
rights are infringed cannot anymore make a claim against the
infringer or succeed in an injunction suit due to his conduct. The
term is most generally, "permission" given by silence
or passiveness. Acceptance or agreement by keeping quiet or by not
making objections.
The common law
doctrine of estoppel by acquiescence is
applied when one party gives legal notice to a second party of a
fact or claim, and the second party fails to challenge or refute
that claim within a reasonable time. The second party is said to
have acquiesced to the claim, and is estopped from later
challenging it, or making a counterclaim. The doctrine is similar
to, and often applied with, estoppel by laches.
This occurred in the second
Georgia v. South Carolina case before the U.S.
Supreme Court in 1992, when it was ruled that Georgia
could no longer make any claim to an island in the Savannah
River, despite the 1787 Treaty
of Beaufort's assignment to the contrary. The court said that
the state had knowingly allowed South
Carolina to join the island as a peninsula to its own coast by
dumping sand from dredging, and to then levy property
taxes on it for decades. Georgia thereby lost the
island-turned-peninsula by its own acquiescence, even though the
treaty had given it all
of the islands in the river (see adverse
possession).
Silence is acquiescence is a related doctrine
that can mean, and have the legal effect, that when confronted with
a wrong or an act that can be considered a tortious act, where one’s silence
may mean that one accepts or permits such acts without protest or
claim
thereby loses rights to a claim of any loss or damage.
Nonacquiescence
In law, nonacquiescence is a term of art applied to governments with separation of powers, where one branch refuses to acquiesce or comply with the decision of another. In the context of lawsuits, executive nonacquiescence in judicial decisions can lead to bizarre Kafkaesque situations where parties discover to their chagrin that their legal victory over the government is an empty one. Nonacquiescence can also possibly lead to a constitutional crisis, given certain critical situations and decisions.In the United
States, certain
federal agencies are notorious for practicing nonacquiescence
(essentially, ignoring court decisions that go against them).
Although executive nonacquiescence has been heavily criticized by
the courts, the U.S.
Congress has not yet been able to pass a bill
formally punishing such behavior.
In one of the most serious instances of
nonacquiesence in the U.S., U.S.
President Andrew
Jackson ignored the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that Georgia
had stolen Cherokee lands for
the Cherokee
Land Lottery in the early 1830s, when the first gold rush
occurred. They were then forced off of their own land on the
Trail of
Tears, shammed in the Treaty
of New Echota. The president was never officially held
responsible for his blatant contempt
of the court, about which he reportedly said: "they have made
their decision, now let them enforce it".
acquiescence in German: Acquiescence
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
OK,
Quakerism, acceptance, acceptation, acception, accession, accommodation, accord, accordance, adaptation, adaption, adjustment, affirmation, affirmative, affirmative
voice, agreeability, agreeableness, agreement, agreement in
principle, alacrity,
allegiance, amenability, approbation, approval, ardor, assent, assentation, assurance, assuredness, aye, belief, blessing, certainty, cheerful consent,
complaisance,
compliance, concurrence, confidence, conformance, conformation
other-direction, conformity, congruity, connivance, consent, consistency, conventionality,
cooperativeness,
correspondence,
credence, credit, credulity, deference, dependence, docility, duteousness, dutifulness, eagerness, endorsement, enthusiasm, faith, favorable disposition,
favorableness,
fealty, flexibility, forwardness, gameness, general agreement,
goodwill, harmony, hearty assent, homage, hope, humbleness, humility, keeping, kneeling, line, loyalty, malleability, meekness, nonopposal, nonopposition, nonresistance, nonviolent
resistance, obedience,
obediency, obeisance, observance, okay, orthodoxy, passive resistance,
passiveness,
passivity, permission, pliability, pliancy, promptitude, promptness, quietism, ratification, readiness, reception, receptive mood,
receptiveness,
receptivity,
reconcilement,
reconciliation,
reliance, reliance on,
resignation,
resignedness,
responsiveness,
right mood, sanction,
service, servility, servitium, stock, store, strictness, subjection, submission, submissiveness, submittal, suit and service,
suit service, supineness, support, sureness, surety, suspension of disbelief,
tractability,
traditionalism,
trust, uncomplainingness,
ungrudgingness,
uniformity, unloathness, unreluctance, warm assent,
welcome, willing ear,
willing heart, willingness, yielding, zeal, zealousness