Accessory - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: accessory Page: 2 Page 2 of about 69 results ( seconds)Acquittal
Acquittal, The legal certification usually by jury verdict that an accused person is not guilty of the charged offence. [fr. acquitter, Fr.; quietus, Lat., to free, acquit, or discharged], a deliverance and setting free of a person from the suspicion or guilt of an offence; also to be free from entries and molestations by a superior lord, for services issuing out of lands, Cowel. Acquittal is of two kinds--(1) Acquittal in deed, as when a person is cleared by verdict; and (2) Acquittal in law, as if two be indicted for a felony, the one as principal and the other as accessory, and the jury acquit the principal, by law the accessory is also acquitted, 2 Inst. 384.Means the legal certification, usually by jury verdict, that an accused person is not guilty of the charged offence, Black Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 24.If person is acquitted and ordered to be discharged it is illegal any longer to detain him, and the duty of seeing that he is at once discharged is upon the governor of the p...
contract
contract [Latin contractus from contrahere to draw together, enter into (a relationship or agreement), from com- with, together + trahere to draw] 1 : an agreement between two or more parties that creates in each party a duty to do or not do something and a right to performance of the other's duty or a remedy for the breach of the other's duty ;also : a document embodying such an agreement see also accept, bargain, breach, cause, consent, consideration, duty, meeting of the minds, obligation, offer, performance, promise, rescind, social contract, subcontract Uniform Commercial Code in the Important Laws section NOTE: Contracts must be made by parties with the necessary capacity (as age or mental soundness) and must have a lawful, not criminal, object. Except in Louisiana, a valid contract also requires consideration, mutuality of obligations, and a meeting of the minds. In Louisiana, a valid contract requires the consent of the parties and a cause for the contract in addition to c...
Accessories
Accessories, The term 'accessories ' is used in the schedule to describe goods which may have been manufactured for use as an aid or addition.Accessories are not necessarily confined to particular machines for which they may serve as aids. The same item may be an accessory of more than one kind of instrument, Annapurna Carbon Industries Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (1976) 2 SCC 273 (277): AIR 1976 SC 1418. (AP General Sales Tax Act, 1957, Sch. I, Entry 4)An object or device that is not essential in itself but that adds to the beauty or convenience or effectiveness of something else or is supplementary or secondary to something of greater or primary importance which assists in operating or controlling or may serve as aid are accessories (AP General Sales Tax Act, 1957), Mehra Brothers v. Joint Commercial Officer, (1991) 1 SCC 514 (517).Whether an article or part is an accessory cannot be decided with reference to its necessity to its effective use of the vehicle as a whole. General a...
Mandate
Mandate [fr. mandatum, Lat.], a judicial command, charge, commission.Also, a bailment of goods, without reward, to be carried from place to place, or to have some act performed about them. The person employing is called in the Civil Law mandans or mandator, and the person employed mandatarius or mandatory. The distinction between a mandate and a deposit is that in the latter the principal object of the parties is the custody of the thing; and the service and labour are merely accessorial. In the former, the labour and service are the principal objects of the parties, and the thing is merely accessorial. Three things are necessary to create a mandate: (1) that there should exist something which should be the subject of the contract, or some act or business to be done; (2) that it should be done gratuitously; (3) that the parties should voluntarily intend to enter into the contract. A mandatary incurs three obligations: (1) to do the act which is the object of the mandate, and with which...
Goods
Goods, Computer programs are the product of an intellectual process, but once implanted in a medium they are widely distributed to computer owners. An analogy can be drawn to a compact-disc recording of an orchestral rendition. The music is produced by the artistry of musicians and in itself is not a 'good', but when transferred to a laser-readable disc it becomes a readily merchant-able commodity. Similarly, when a professor deliv-ers a lecture, it is not a good, but, when transcribed as a book, it becomes a good. That a computer program may be copyrightable as intellectual property does not alter the fact that once in the form of a floppy disc or other medium, the program is tangible, moveable and available in the marketplace. The fact that some programs may be tailored for specific purposes need not alter their status as 'goods' because the Code definition includes 'specially manufactured goods', Advent Systems Ltd. v. Unisys Corpn., 925 F. 2d 670 3dCir 1991. Associated Cement Compa...
Juri non est consonum quod aliquis accessorius in curia regis convincatur antequam aliquis de facto fuerit attinctus
Juri non est consonum quod aliquis accessorius in curia regis convincatur antequam aliquis de facto fuerit attinctus [Lat.], it is not consonant to justice that any accessory should be convicted in the King's court before some one has been attained of the fact...
Fortia
Fortia, power dominion, or jurisdiction, Leg. Hen. 1, c. 29.Force used by an accessory to allow the principal to commit crime, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 664....
Guarantee
Guarantee, he to whom a guaranty is made; also, and more commonly, the guaranty itself. See GUARANTY.The assurance that a contract or legal act will be duly carried out; Something given or existing as security, such as to fulfill a further engagement or a condition subsequent, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 711.Company limited by. See COMPANIES.Guarantee includes any obligation undertaken before the commencement of this Constitution to make payments in the event of the profits of an undertaking falling short of a specified amount. [Constitution of India, Art. 366(13)]Guarantee, is in collateral engagement to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another person, a promise to another as debtor to secure the payment of a debt payable to him, Stroud's Judicial Dictionary, Vol. 2, p. 1111.Includes any obligation undertaken before the com-mencement of the constitution to make payments in the event of the profits of an undertaking falling short of a specified amount, Constitut...
In alta proditione nullus potest esse accessorius sed principalis solummodo
In alta proditione nullus potest esse accessorius sed principalis solummodo [Lat.], in high treason there is no accessory, but principal alone....
Incite
Incite. It is a Common Law misdemeanor to incite any person to commit a crime. If the crime be actually committed, he who has incited another to the deed is, in the case of felony, an accessory before the fact; in the case of treason or misdemeanor, a principal...
- << Prev.
- Next >>