null and void
adjective
  1. (idiomatic, law) invalid, cancelled, unenforceable
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. More at Wordnik
🌐
Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › dictionary › null and void
NULL AND VOID Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1 week ago - —Sean McIndoe, New York Times, 2 June 2026 The clerk shared with her that the officiant didn’t turn in the proper paperwork following her ceremony, making her initial license null and void after 60 days. —Harriette Cole, Mercury News, 23 May 2026 Failure to provide such proof may, if requested, render Entry null and void. —Tim McGovern, PEOPLE, 18 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for null and void
🌐
Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › us › example › english › null-and-void
NULL AND VOID example sentences | Cambridge Dictionary
The proposal is that such conditions in the future should be null and void, unless accompanied by full compensation for the damage done. ... Example from the Hansard archive.
🌐
Dictionary.com
dictionary.com › browse › null-and-void
NULL AND VOID Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
These contracts, he said, unconstitutionally treat children as property, rendering them null and void. ... However, the court has now ruled that the fine "must be declared null and void" because of flaws in the investigation, according to a ruling obtained by AFP on Tuesday.
🌐
YourDictionary
sentence.yourdictionary.com › home › null-and-void
Examples of "Null-and-void" in a Sentence | YourDictionary.com
An important part of the dragoman's duties is to attend during any legal proceedings to which a subject of his nationality is a party, as failing his attendance and his concurrence in the judgment delivered such proceedings are null and void.
🌐
Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › sentences › null and void
Examples of 'NULL AND VOID' in a Sentence | Merriam-Webster
'Null and void' in a sentence: Marshall asked the court to declare the rule null and void.
Find elsewhere
🌐
Longman
ldoceonline.com › dictionary › null-and-void
null and void | meaning of null and void in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English | LDOCE
→ nullExamples from the Corpusnull and void• If the contract has not been signed by witnesses, it is considered null and void.• Yet it was Shirley Place who kept the interview firmly null and void.• The elections were declared null and void.• As far as he was concerned, all of the ...
🌐
Medium
rufgill.medium.com › how-to-use-null-and-void-in-a-sentence-ce09c4a06444
How To Use Null And Void In A Sentence? | by Ruf gill | Medium
March 4, 2025 - Utah’s legal framework encapsulates numerous instances where contracts, agreements, or legal documents can be rendered null and void. These might be due to a lack of capacity, unlawful consideration, or misrepresentation. For example, consider a hypothetical real estate transaction in Salt Lake City.
🌐
Signeasy
signeasy.com › home › blog › business › null and void contracts: causes and consequences
Null and Void Meaning: What Makes a Contract Invalid
January 21, 2026 - ... Examples of null and void contracts include agreements made for illegal activities, contracts entered into by someone without legal capacity such as a person declared legally incompetent, agreements lacking essential elements like lawful ...
🌐
Cobrief
cobrief.app › resources › legal-glossary › null-and-void-overview-definition-and-example
Null and void: Overview, definition and example - Cobrief
February 11, 2026 - In another example, if a contract is signed by an individual who does not have the legal authority to do so on behalf of their company, the contract might be "null and void," meaning the company is not bound by the agreement.
🌐
Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › thesaurus › null and void
NULL AND VOID Synonyms: 18 Similar and Opposite Words | Merriam-Webster Thesaurus
May 17, 2026 - —Jack Birle, The Washington Examiner, 15 May 2026 Local governments across Florida have received letters from the state Department of Commerce declaring their comprehensive plan amendments since August 2024 to be null and void, have been sued or have backed away from planning changes to avoid legal peril. —Haley Busch, The Orlando Sentinel, 26 Apr. 2026 So, any debate over a tight end at that spot could be null and void. —Mike Kaye march 16, Charlotte Observer, 16 Mar. 2026 See All Example Sentences for null and void
🌐
Medium
rufgill.medium.com › what-is-null-and-void-with-an-example-57f2d086a769
What Is Null And Void With An Example? | by Ruf gill | Medium
March 5, 2025 - In Utah, the determination of what is null and void can depend heavily on the details surrounding a contract or legal document. According to the Utah Code, several aspects can render a contract null and void.
🌐
Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › thesaurus › null-and-void
NULL AND VOID - 15 Synonyms and Antonyms - Cambridge English
April 15, 2026 - NULL AND VOID - Synonyms, related words and examples | Cambridge English Thesaurus
🌐
Thesaurus.com
thesaurus.com › browse › declare-null-and-void
DECLARE NULL AND VOID Synonyms & Antonyms - 125 words | Thesaurus.com
abolish abrogate annul deny dismantle dismiss invalidate lift nullify quash remove renounce repeal rescind retract reverse set aside vacate void withdraw ... abjure backpedal countermand disclaim disown erase expunge forswear negate nix obliterate recall recant repudiate scrub ... affirm allow approve corroborate enact establish fix institute keep legalize pass permit ratify remain sanction stay support validate ... Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com. We again declare null and void a compact which disposes of us against our consent.
🌐
Rocket Lawyer
rocketlawyer.com › business-and-contracts › business-operations › contract-management › legal-guide › what-makes-a-contract-null-and-void
What Makes a Contract Null and Void? - Rocket Lawyer
August 17, 2023 - A null and void contract is considered dead on arrival because it was never valid. By contrast, a voidable contract may be deemed valid if both parties agree to proceed. For example, Janelle offers to buy Eric's autographed poster of Prince, but upon closer inspection, both she and Eric realize that the autograph is not Prince's, but Sheila E's.
🌐
Medium
rufgill.medium.com › what-is-an-example-of-null-and-void-63ab4c4e1f0f
What Is An Example Of Null And Void? | by Ruf gill | Medium
March 19, 2025 - If it’s later discovered that the landlord did not have the legal ownership of the property, your lease could be considered null and void. This is because the landlord lacked the authority to rent the property in the first place, rendering the contract meaningless. Another example involves employment contracts.
🌐
Bab.la
en.bab.la › sentences › english › null-and-void
Use null and void in a sentence - Examples
English The elections must be declared null and void, and new ones therefore need to be organised. volume_up more_vert ... English This is a perfect example of vice of consent, and of a vote which is null and void.
Top answer
1 of 8
71

I don't remember how I learned this, and I can't find a reference just now, but the peculiar custom of redundancy in our legal documents dates back to medieval England. The Norman conquest of 1066 put a French-speaking king and nobility in charge of an English-speaking people. The English courts at the time were extremely sensitive to detail and would throw out a petition for something as minor as a misspelling, so getting every detail right was crucial. Thus, lawyers developed a habit of incorporating English synonyms for key French words (or it might have been the reverse; memory fails me on that detail). This is how we get phrases like null and void and cease and desist. Since American law (except in the state of Louisiana) is based on English common law, the U.S. inherited this custom. Over time, I suspect the legal professional largely forgot exactly why it was building all this redundancy into its documents and "decided" it was as a general matter of belt-and-suspenders caution.

EDIT: I finally found a reference of sorts at Wikipedia:

David Crystal (2004) explains a stylistic influence upon English legal language. During the Medieval period lawyers used a mixture of Latin, French and English. To avoid ambiguity lawyers often offered pairs of words from different languages. Sometimes there was little ambiguity to resolve and the pairs merely gave greater emphasis, becoming a stylistic habit. This is a feature of legal style that continues to the present day. Examples of mixed language doublets are: "breaking and entering" (English/French), "fit and proper" (English/French), "lands and tenements" (English/French), "will and testament" (English/Latin). Examples of English-only doublets are: "let and hindrance", "have and hold."

2 of 8
40

Curious to learn more about Ms. Hess' answer, I undertook a little more research* today...

The history begins, as with so many curiosities in the English language, with the Norman invasion in 1066. At that time, English was the language of the ordinary people, and the law. At first, William the Conqueror interfered little with use of English in official documents, primarily to bolster his claim to the throne, as it was before his reign strongly associated with the crown and kingly continuity. As time went on, however, and as more and more Normans gained positions of prominence in the English court, and were elevated to the nobility, French came to be the spoken language of the upper-class, and Latin, the imported written language of the learned, eventually came to completely replace Old English in legal documents. This continued for some 250 odd years.

By 1275, we find the first statutes written in French, and by 1310 French had overtaken Latin as the language of law. Well, not exactly overtaken; important Latin legal terms, terms of art, were being sprinkled in French language, where needed. We have inherited these terms up to the present day; this is where our civil law gets important concepts like mens rea, habeaus corpus, writs of mandamus, and a million other terms. Still, Law French was the language that lawyers communicated with each other in, and lawyers continued to develop their the profession with it, creating ever new terms of art when trying, pleading, and judging cases. Things continued in this way for a 100 more years.

Curiously, just as French was just reaching its supremacy as official written language of the Law, it was dying out as a spoken language among the nobility. Increasingly, they were speaking a bastardized pidgin of English and French called Anglo-Norman, and by 1400, Anglo-Norman had nearly died out even amongst the royal household in favor of English. Henry V broke things off completely with his Norman heritage after famously going to war with France in the Hundreds Years' War. English, with modifications, had now become the language of all the English people.

Well, mostly. Law French was still the obscure, technical language of the legal profession, and it was contributing many terms of art of its own, particularly in property law: this is where property law jargon like estoppel, estate, and esquire come from. However, even the lawyers eventually lost control of a tongue they didn't speak, and legalese became a complex argot of Law Latin and Law French terms swimming in a sea of ordinary English.

A conundrum. By 1362, we have evidence that the courts were becoming recognizant of this troublesome state of affairs, as a Statute of Pleading was enacted "condemning French as 'much unknown in said Realm'" and requiring that "all pleas be 'pleaded, shewed, defended, answered, and debated, and judged in the English tongue.'" Ironically enough, the Statute itself was written in Law French, and it was not till 200 years later, when the vocabulary of Law French had shrunk to about 1000 words, that English became the dominant language of the law.

Still, all those terms of art couldn't be simply abandoned. So lawyers of the day simply did the next best thing: they imported synonyms acknowledged as "English" to accompany those technical terms, to give the "synonyms" independent legal weight in documents, and eventually, the combination of the two became phrases with inertia of their own. Such as:

breaking and entering
fit and proper
will and testament
free and clear
acknowledge and confess
law and order
to have and to hold

(English terms are italicized.)

"But Billare!" "Isn't your answer supposed to be talking about null and void?" "And, if I'm not mistaken, doesn't null come from the Latin nullus, meaning 'not any, none,' and doesn't void come from the Latin vocivus, meaning 'unoccupied, vacant'"? "Where's the Old English term there?!"

Ah, yes. The punchline. Null and void became a phrase of their own because the two synonyms from Latin were imported at different times into "ordinary" English. I quote from David Melinkoff's The Language of Law:

Early in the reign of Elizabeth I, null – with a long life as a negative in law French and in Latin – became an English synonym for the law's use of void. Another hundred years, and null and void were a team, null taking the place of other explanatory nothingness (no value, no effect) that had often accompanied void. The combination stuck despite frowns in and out of the law.

So it follows the same rule. Null and void is a semantically redundant phrase because it was formed as a compromised term of art, and has continued in this way for a long, long time.

*: All acknowledgments and quotes go to this most excellent book, Legal Language, by a certain Peter Tiersma, where I found basically most of this research. Do read it if you're interested in more.