mile

UCC / CommercialLegal glossary term

Quick answer

Mile usually means five thousand, two hundred eighty yards of distance in U.S. law. In contracts, it defines quantifiable limits for travel or jurisdiction. Before signing, check if the contract specifies statute miles versus ground miles.

Definitions

What is mile?

Legal Definition

A mile is a standard unit of distance, equal to five thousand, two hundred eighty yards in U.S. legal contexts. When parties specify performance metrics or jurisdictional boundaries using this measure, it establishes quantifiable obligations regarding location or travel. Courts pay close attention to whether the contract specifies statute miles versus surveyed ground miles.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine a permission slip says you must walk one mile to recess; that sets a clear limit on how far you can go. It's like drawing a line in the sand for your playtime.

Contract relevance

Why mile matters in contracts

Misapplying the mile—saying 5 miles when the intent was 10—can lead to breach of contract and subsequent damages awarded by the presiding judge. The defaulting party bears the risk of mismeasurement.

Document context

Where mile appears in documents

Document typeSectionWhy it matters
Service AgreementScope of Work sectionDetermines required travel distance for service delivery.
Real Estate Purchase ContractProperty description/Boundary linesDefines the physical extent of land being bought.
Traffic Citation TicketViolation detailsEstablishes the specific distance traveled during a violation event.
Statute (e.g., UCC)Limitation of Liability clausesSets maximum distances for implied warranties or performance obligations.
Lease AgreementPremises location descriptionDefines the geographic scope of the leased property.
Regulatory FilingOperational parameters sectionQuantifies required distance between checkpoints or facilities.

Contract language

Common contract wording

Contract wordingPlain-English meaningWhat to check
Mileage allowance shall not exceed ten miles per dayThis sets a cap on daily travel reimbursement.Confirm if this means actual driving or straight-line distance.
The delivery point is within five miles of the primary depotEstablishes a radius for acceptable drop-off locations.Verify what measurement standard (statute/ground) applies to that radius.
Travel must be accomplished within one mile radius of the siteThis tightly constrains where work can physically take place.Check if this implies straight-line distance or drivable route mileage.
Performance metrics measured in miles traveledQuantifies the effort required for a contracted task.Ensure the method of measurement (GPS tracking vs. odometer) is defined.

Red flags

Red flags to watch for

Risky wording patternWhy it may matterWhat to check
Vague reference to 'mile' without qualificationYou don't know if they mean straight-line or drivable distance, leading to disputes.Demand clarification: 'statute miles' or 'ground miles'.
Using only the term 'miles' in a high-stakes contractThe lack of context invites arguments over measurement standards.Review surrounding text for clues on how distance is calculated.
Mileage cap that seems unusually low (e.g., 1 mile)This might be intentional to restrict scope, but you need confirmation.Ask why the limit is so tight and what exceptions exist.
Confusingly mixing units (miles/kilometers) in one clauseMixing systems creates immediate ambiguity regarding the base unit.Ensure all distance references use a consistent unit standard throughout.

Wording examples

Clearer wording examples

Vague wording

‘Reasonable mileage’

Clearer wording

‘Mileage calculated at $0.55 per actual mile, capped at 1,200 miles per year’

Vague wording

‘Mileage shall be paid as incurred’

Clearer wording

‘Mileage will be paid at the agreed rate within ten days of documented submission’

Note: “clearer” means easier to read — not legally reviewed or guaranteed safe.

Pre-signature checklist

What to check before signing

1

Is it 'statute miles' or 'ground miles'?

2

What is the starting point for the measurement?

3

Are there exceptions to the mileage limit?

4

Does the contract define how distance is calculated (e.g., straight line vs. road)?

5

If ambiguous, does the governing state law dictate interpretation?

6

Is there a defined methodology for measuring travel between points?

Party impact

How mile affects each party

PartyWhat this party should check
Seller/VendorMust confirm if their required performance zone falls within the agreed-upon mile limit.
Buyer/ClientShould ensure the contract allows for necessary travel distance to receive goods or services.
Employee/ContractorNeeds clarity on whether mileage reimbursement is based on actual driving or a flat rate per mile.
LandownerMust verify that boundaries defined in miles match their property survey records.

Comparison

mile vs similar terms

Related termPlain meaningMain difference from mile
YardA much smaller unit; 1 mile equals 1,760 yards.Used for precise measurements within a single contract scope.
Kilometer (km)The metric equivalent; 1 mile is approximately 1.609 km.Useful if the parties are international or referencing global standards.
Statute MileDistance measured along established legal routes/grids.This is the default standard unless otherwise specified in U.S. contracts.
Ground MileActual distance traveled by a vehicle over roads.This reflects real-world driving conditions and traffic.

Missing or vague

If mile is missing or vague

If the contract only says 'a certain mileage,' parties will argue whether it means straight-line flight path or actual road travel, which can easily lead to disputes. Furthermore, without defining the starting point, one party might claim the measurement begins at their office instead of yours. This vagueness forces litigation over interpretation, often defaulting to state case law rules regarding commercial reasonableness.

Document map

Document section map

Contract sectionWhat to inspect
DefinitionsLook for a specific definition of 'Mile' or 'Mileage'.
Scope of WorkCheck how distance limits are imposed on the contracted tasks.
Payment TermsSee if mileage dictates reimbursement rates (e.g., $0.65 per mile).
Site Location/PremisesConfirming that geographical boundaries use miles as their unit.
Force Majeure ClauseSometimes travel distances define when an event is too far to reasonably overcome.

Visual model

Understand mile fast

An explainer image has not been generated for this term yet.
01

Landlord specifies a 3-mile radius for tenant parking; Tenant parks 4 miles away and risks a late fee.

02

Borrower agrees to deliver collateral within a 10-mile zone of the bank headquarters; Failure results in accelerated loan repayment.

03

The UCC requires delivery 'within one mile' of the buyer’s warehouse for penalty abatement.

Document context

How mile shows up in legal documents

What is it?

This term functions as a quantifiable unit of measure, governing distances stipulated within contracts, court orders, and regulatory specifications.

Why does it matter?

Misapplying the mile—saying 5 miles when the intent was 10—can lead to breach of contract and subsequent damages awarded by the presiding judge. The defaulting party bears the risk of mismeasurement.

When does it matter?

The term becomes active when a clause requires performance 'within five miles' of a fixed location, or when defining jurisdictional limits for service of process.

Where is it usually seen?

You will frequently encounter this unit in real estate deeds (measuring lot boundaries), commercial leases, and transportation regulations governed by the DOT.

Who is affected?

A carrier gains enforceable rights if they deliver goods within the contracted mile radius; a tenant risks default if their commute exceeds the leased mile limit to the workplace.

How does it work?

First, parties must agree on the standard (e.g., statute vs. surveyed). Then, the actual distance is measured against that baseline. Within the contract terms, this measurement dictates whether performance was fulfilled or breached.

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Wikipedia

Mile

Mile

The mile, sometimes the international mile or statute mile to distinguish it from other miles, is a British imperial unit and United States customary unit of length; both are based on the older English unit of length equal to 5,280 English feet, or 1,760...

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Knowledge graph

Where mile connects to real contract work

This layer links the term to nearby glossary entries, document use cases, and contract-risk guides so readers can move from definition to context without dead ends.

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Source & disclosure

This page is an AI-assisted plain-English explanation based on LexPredict Legal Dictionary context and contract-review patterns. It is not legal advice. Meaning may vary by jurisdiction, industry, and exact clause wording.

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