Right to Accept Sample Clauses
The "Right to Accept" clause grants a party the explicit authority to agree to an offer, proposal, or terms presented by another party within a contract. In practice, this clause outlines the conditions or timeframe under which acceptance must occur, such as requiring written notice or specifying a deadline for response. Its core function is to ensure clarity and certainty in contractual negotiations by defining when and how acceptance becomes legally binding, thereby reducing the risk of disputes over whether an agreement has been reached.
Right to Accept. In the event that the options provided for in Section 2.3 (b) hereof expire without exercise or the Offered Corporation Securities are not purchased pursuant to exercise thereof, then within sixty (60) days after all rights to make such purchase shall have expired, the Selling Stockholder, subject to the provisions of Section 2.4, shall have the right to consummate the sale of all of the Offered Corporation Securities, upon terms and conditions no less favorable than those contained in the Offer, to the offeror thereunder. If for any reason the sale is not consummated within the period provided for herein, the Selling Stockholder shall not thereafter dispose of the Offered Corporation Securities unless and until it has again complied with all of the provisions hereof.
Right to Accept. The right to accept any equity and debt financing, or any other such transaction the Investment Banker may introduce to the Client, is vested solely in the Client.
Right to Accept. Reject any or all Bids
Right to Accept or reject content
Right to Accept. The right to accept any merger or acquisition, or any other such transaction the Consultant may introduce the Client to, is solely that of the Client.
Right to Accept. Any Bid and Reject Any or All Bids Authority reserves the right to accept or reject any Bid, and to annul the tendering process and reject all Bids at any time prior to award of contract, without thereby incurring any liability to the affected Bidder(s) or any obligation to inform the affected Bidder(s) of the grounds for such action.
Right to Accept. The right to accept any capital investment by way of unsecured debt or other secured credit facilities, equity investment by way of registered or non-registered securities, mergers, fusions, acquisitions, combinations, joint ventures, strategic alliances or distribution agreements, or any other transaction CTC may introduce to the Client is vested solely in the Client.
Right to Accept. In the event that the options provided for in Section 2.4 (b) hereof expire without exercise or the Offered Corporation Securities are not purchased pursuant to exercise thereof, then within sixty (60) days after all rights to make such purchase shall have expired, the Selling Stockholder, subject to the provisions of Section 2.5, shall have the right to consummate the sale of all of the Offered Corporation Securities,
Right to Accept. All or Portion of Proposal Unless otherwise specified in the solicitation, the Lead State may accept any item or combination of items as specified in the solicitation or of any proposal unless the Offeror expressly restricts an item or combination of items in its proposal and conditions its response on receiving all items for which it provided a proposal. In the event that the Offeror so restricts its proposal, the Lead State may consider the Offeror’s restriction and evaluate whether the award on such basis will result in the best value to the Lead State and the NASPO ValuePoint program. The Lead State may otherwise determine at its sole discretion that such restriction is non-responsive and renders the Offeror ineligible for further evaluation. Offerors must comply with all of the terms of the solicitation, the State Procurement Code (AS 36.30), and all applicable local, state, and federal laws, codes, and regulations. The procurement officer may reject any proposal that does not comply with all of the material and substantial terms, conditions, and performance requirements of the solicitation. Offerors may not qualify the proposal nor restrict the rights of the state. If an Offeror does so, the Lead State may determine the proposal to be a non-responsive counter-offer and the proposal may be rejected. The state reserves the right to refrain from making an award if it determines that to be in its best interest. A proposal from a debarred or suspended Offeror shall be rejected.