Wrongful in a sentence as an adjective

He fled from the US to avoid a wrongful death lawsuit.

A wrongful death lawsuit would cost six or seven figures.

I hope he sues for wrongful termination and is successful.

Anything you want, but not something that is grounds for a wrongful termination suit.

A dirty little secret of HR is that "values" can be a defense against wrongful termination lawsuits.

Yes, including acts by employees that, though wrongful, may not have been within the contemplation of Congress when it passed the statute.

Will the kids or their families get any restitution for wrongful imprisonment?

When you take them temporarily, it's "wrongful appropriation.

That day I made a difference - I removed a wrongful psychiatric diagnosis and gave the proper diagnosis.

Just because California is an "at will" state doesn't mean a company cannot be sued for wrongful termination or constructive dismissal.

It protects the company against frivolous wrongful termination lawsuits.

Well this is what happens when you have no worker safety regulations and the families of the workers are poor Pakistanis and Bengalis that can't file wrongful death lawsuits.

Now, we're not talking about American legal policy on things like wrongful imprisonment by the LA Crash unit, idiotic "3-strikes your out" laws, or minimum sentencing laws.

In exceptional cases, preliminary injunctions may impinge on First Amendment rights even when defendants are in privity or have wrongfully acquired the information.

No bank wants the perception...It's even simpler than that: no bank, and more importantly, no insurance company which carries banks as clients, wants to defend or settle a lawsuit alleging wrongful death through negligence of a would-be hero bank employee.

Wrongful definitions

adjective

having no legally established claim; "the wrongful heir to the throne"

See also: unlawful

adjective

unlawfully violating the rights of others; "wrongful death"; "a wrongful diversion of trust income"

adjective

not just or fair; "a wrongful act"; "a wrongful charge"