Absent - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: absentex parte
ex parte [Medieval Latin, on behalf (of)] : on behalf of or involving only one party to a legal matter and in the absence of and usually without notice to the other party [an ex parte motion] [relief granted ex parte] used in citations to indicate the party seeking judicial relief in a case [Ex Parte Jones, 7 U.S. 2 (1866)] compare in re, inter partes ...
Tutius semper est errare acquietando quam in puniendo, ex parte misericordia quam ex parte justitia
Tutius semper est errare acquietando quam in puniendo, ex parte misericordia quam ex parte justitia (H.H. P.C. 290), it is always safer to err in acquitting than in punishing: on the side of mercy, then of strict justice....
absent without leave
absent without leave :absent from one's place of duty in the armed forces without authority ...
Absent
Absent, 'Absent' literally that is etymologically means 'not present'. In re Laurence Claude Levack AIR 1954 Mad 898 (899). [Succession Act, 1925, s. 241]...
Waring, Ex parte, Rule of
Waring, Ex parte, Rule of. The principle established in Ex parte Waring, (1815) 19 Ves. 345, that securities held by the acceptor of a bill against his acceptances are available to the bill-holders if both acceptor and drawer are insolvent, even though the bill-holders had no knowledge that the securities had been appropriated for the purpose....
Ex parte
Upon or from one side only one sided partial as an ex parte statement...
Deliberately absented himself
Deliberately absented himself, consideration must be given to the concept of deliberate absence and to the concept of a trial, Government of Albania v. Blefa, (2005) 1 WLR 3576. [Extradition Act, 2003 (41), s. 85(3)]...
Ex parte
Ex parte [Latin from the Part], on or from one party only, usu. without notice to or argument from the adverse party, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn....
Ex parte talis
Ex parte talis, a writ that lay for a bailiff or receiver, who, having auditors appointed to take his accounts, cannot obtain of them reasonable allowance, but is case into prison.-Fitz. N.B. 129....
Reo absente
Reo absente, means the absence of the defendant, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1300....
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