- (commingle) mix or blend; "His book commingles sarcasm and sadness"
- (commingle) blend: mix together different elements; "The colors blend well"
- Commingling literally means "mixing together". Used in a legal context it is a breach of trust in which a fiduciary mixes funds that he holds in the care of a client with his own funds, making it difficult to determine which funds belong to the fiduciary and which belong to the client. ...
- (Commingle) Commingling, is the sharing and pooling of personal and company assets. It is often alleged to have occurred in an “alter ego” situation. ...
- (COMMINGLE) To allow to mix, as in money belonging to two or more people deposited to the same account and used by each person regardless of the amount they have deposited.
- (Commingle) A process where different kinds of mail are mixed together and sorted by destination address in order to generate savings in postage.
- (Commingle) Is the act of sharing or pooling of corporate with personal assets. It is a way to become personally liable for corporate acts.
- (Commingle) combining mutuel pools from off-track sites with the host track.
- (commingle) To integrate dissimilar mail (such as subscriber and nonsubscriber copies or machinable and irregular parcels) into the same mailing.
- (commingling) The illegal practice of combining or mixing clients' funds with the agent's own funds.
- (Commingling) The illegal act by a real estate broker of placing client or customer funds with personal funds. By law, brokers are required to maintain a separate trust or escrow account for other parties funds held temporarily by the broker.
- (COMMINGLING) To mingle or mix; for example, to deposit client funds in the broker’s personal or general account. A licensee found guilty of commingling can have the license suspended or revoked by the Real Estate Commission.
- (Commingling) In the context of securities, this involves mixing customer-owned securities with brokerage firm-owned securities. This process is referred to as rehypothecation, which is the use of customers' collateral to secure their loans. ...
- (Commingling) To mix funds held in trust with other funds. For example: A broker or builder mixes deposits (should be in a trust account) with his funds by putting the deposits in his general account. ...
- (Commingling) Packing together different articles that are subject to different duties.
- (commingling) Combination of assets across multiple investors and across different products into a single investment vehicle. One specific example is combining the assets distributed from a qualified plan or 403(b) plan with other IRA assets. ...
- (COMMINGLING) A term used to describe the undesirable practice of mixing fasteners from different batches that are the same size and grade in the same container.
- (COMMINGLING) Separate property that has been "commingled with the joint marital estate" also becomes marital property subject to equitable distribution. Johnson v. Johnson, 650 So.2d 1281, 1286 (Miss. 1994). ...
- (Commingling) "Physically combined or mixed. [19 CFR § 102.1(b)] Regarding fungible goods from different countries, which are commingled, the country or countries of origin may be determined on the basis of an inventory management method of the Customs regulations. [19 CFR § 102.12(b)]"
- (Commingling) 1. Contributing after-tax money to a qualified retirement account consisting of pre-tax contributions. 2. Mixing customer-owned securities with those owned by a firm in its proprietary accounts. ...
- (Commingling) Animals mingling close together, such as occurs during transportation and in crowded pens. It is an excellent opportunity for pathogens to be passed from one animal to another.
- (Commingling) Combining things into one body.
- (Commingling) Illegally mixing deposits or monies, collected from a client, with one's personal or business account. Taking money out too soon or putting it into escrow too late (10 banking days).
- (Commingling) Method of packing a shipment in which various goods subject to differing duties are grouped together. Because of this, the value of each type of item is difficult to determine.
- (Commingling) Mixing of personal money with money held in trust. Illegal intent is not necessary for this to be a violation.