Grounds are more than just reasons for a court to order a remedy. It is the grounds provided for by law that serve as the basis for the application for discharge. For example, a woman may sue her neighbour for trespassing on the grounds that her fence was erected across her border. Her real reason for the lawsuit could be that she doesn`t like the loud music he plays on her stereo and wants to get him in trouble. However, if its fence does infringe its property, it has grounds of action based on trespassing. 1. Soil; Earth; Part of the surface of the land intended for private use and cultivated or suitable for cultivation. Although this term is sometimes used in transportation and in laws as a synonym for „earth“, it is in fact of a more limited meaning because, strictly speaking, it applies only to the surface, whereas „earth“ includes everything below the surface, and because „soil“ always means dry land, while „land“ can and often includes lake and stream beds and other underwater surfaces. See Wood v. Carter, 70 III, Appendix 218; State v.
Jersey City, 25 N.J. Law, 520; Com. v. Roxbury, 9 Gray, Mass. 491. The base or foundation; Sufficient legal grounds to justify an appeal. Supported by Black`s Law Dictionary, Free 2nd ed., and The Law Dictionary.