forestall

forestall (for-stawl), vb.

1. To prevent (an event, result, etc.).

2. Hist. To intercept or obstruct (as a person on a royal highway).

3. Hist. To prevent (a tenant) from coming on the premises.

4. Hist. To intercept (as a deer reentering a forest).

5. Hist. To buy (goods) for the purpose of reselling at a higher price. • At common law, this was an indictable offense. — Also spelled forstall. See FORESTALLING THE MARKET.

“[A] growing town in England might have placed a higher value on grain than a neighboring town with a static population, yet traditional patterns of business might continue to send the same amount of grain to both towns. A forestaller would bid against the traditional buyer in the smaller town, obtain the grain, and resell it where it could command a higher price in the larger town. Forestalling did not harm allocative efficiency. Indeed, it was a highly effective means of reallocating scarce goods to their most highly valued uses — the very definition of efficiency. Rather, forestalling was objectionable, and thus prohibited as a restraint of trade, because the bidding process necessarily resulted in higher grain prices in many parts of the country.” Stephen F. Ross, Principles of Antitrust Law 12 (1993).


专业法律词汇 词条贡献者
译者Eugina,毕业于一所旨在培养高级翻译专业人才的翻译院校,擅长翻译涉及国防和军工领域的法律文件。
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