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Concurrence - Law Dictionary Search Results

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cause

fact : a cause without which the result would not have occurred called also actual cause but-for cause concurrent cause : a cause that joins simultaneously with another cause to produce a result called also concurring cause

Divisional Court

judges of the High Court, or as many more judges as the President of a Division, with the concurrence of the judges of the Division, may think expedient, for the transaction of such business as may be

jurisdiction

decisions of lower tribunals and to reverse, affirm, or modify those decisions compare original jurisdiction in this entry concurrent jurisdiction : jurisdiction that is shared by different courts and that may allow for removal [two states may

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Consideration

the party promising may, in such case, sue immediately after the promise is made. (c) Mutual promises are concurrent considerations, and will support each other if they be made simultaneously, unless one or the other be void.

Estate

or an equitable estate, land being an immovable is capable of being the subject of many estates existing concurrently with each other, thus the absolute ownership or fee simple may be leased and sub-leased, mortgaged and charged,

Chose

remedies for the same; and (c) the power to give a good discharge for the same without the concurrence of the assignor, subject to certain provisions contained in the s.. See also the (English) Policies of Assurance

Tenants' Compensation Act, 1890

4 (2). At Common Law a mortgagor, and therefore any tenant of his becoming such after mortgage with-out concurrence of the mortgagee, is a mere tres-passer, liable to ejectment without notice, and so liable to lose all

juridical act

the civil law of Louisiana : an expression of will that is intended to have legal consequences [the concurrence of a spouse is a juridical act "Louisiana Civil Code"]

present

being in attendance : being in one place and not elsewhere [no person shall be convicted without the concurrence of two thirds of the members "U.S. Constitution art. I"]

privity

rights. 3 : private or joint knowledge of a private matter ;esp : awareness (as of wrongdoing) implying concurrence

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Concurrence - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

cause

fact : a cause without which the result would not have occurred called also actual cause but-for cause concurrent cause : a cause that joins simultaneously with another cause to produce a result called also concurring cause

Divisional Court

judges of the High Court, or as many more judges as the President of a Division, with the concurrence of the judges of the Division, may think expedient, for the transaction of such business as may be

jurisdiction

decisions of lower tribunals and to reverse, affirm, or modify those decisions compare original jurisdiction in this entry concurrent jurisdiction : jurisdiction that is shared by different courts and that may allow for removal [two states may

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Consideration

the party promising may, in such case, sue immediately after the promise is made. (c) Mutual promises are concurrent considerations, and will support each other if they be made simultaneously, unless one or the other be void.

Estate

or an equitable estate, land being an immovable is capable of being the subject of many estates existing concurrently with each other, thus the absolute ownership or fee simple may be leased and sub-leased, mortgaged and charged,

Chose

remedies for the same; and (c) the power to give a good discharge for the same without the concurrence of the assignor, subject to certain provisions contained in the s.. See also the (English) Policies of Assurance

Tenants' Compensation Act, 1890

4 (2). At Common Law a mortgagor, and therefore any tenant of his becoming such after mortgage with-out concurrence of the mortgagee, is a mere tres-passer, liable to ejectment without notice, and so liable to lose all

juridical act

the civil law of Louisiana : an expression of will that is intended to have legal consequences [the concurrence of a spouse is a juridical act "Louisiana Civil Code"]

present

being in attendance : being in one place and not elsewhere [no person shall be convicted without the concurrence of two thirds of the members "U.S. Constitution art. I"]

privity

rights. 3 : private or joint knowledge of a private matter ;esp : awareness (as of wrongdoing) implying concurrence

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