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Declaratively - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Oath

nor a Jew, the oath shall be administered in any manner which is now lawful. The (English) Statutory Declarations Act, 1835, abolishes unnecessary and extra-judicial oaths, and empowers any justice of the peace, notary public, or other

Transubstantiation

Church calls Transubstantiation.'-Creed of Pope Pius IV., founded on Ch. iv., sess. xiii., of the Council of Trent. Declaration against Transubstantiation.-A Declaration (commonly called the 'Declaration against Transubstantiation') was required of all members of either House of

Trust

s. 7 [reproduced by s. 53 (1) (b) of the Law of Property Act, 1925], requires that 'all declarations or creations of trusts or confidences of any lands, tenements, or hereditaments shall be manifested and proved by

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protest

protest 1 : a solemn declaration of opinion and usually of disagreement: as a : a solemn written declaration by a notary public or

Bill of Rights

Bill of Rights, a declaration delivered by the Lords and Commons to the Prince and Princess of Orange, and afterwards enacted in Parliament,

Deed

in an appointment under a power or (before 1926) in a covenant to stand seised, or a simple declaration of uses, because such deeds themselves fulfil that office by limiting the estate to be created. (g) Tenendum.

Uses

or executed; distributable into:- (a) Those arising by act of parties, which were created either- (1) By express declaration in a feoffment, deed, etc. (2) By presumed intention in a will; (3) By certain considerations. (b) Those

Perjury

deals with false statements on oath otherwise than in a judicial proceeding, and s. 3 with false oaths, declarations, notices, etc., with reference to marriage; an offence under either of these sections is a misdemeanour and punishable

Simony

go to the Crown, and the Clerical Subscription Act, 1865 (28 & 29 Vict. c. 122), required a declaration against simony to be subscribed by every person about to be instituted or collated to any benefice or

Swear

Swear, includes affirming and declaring in the case of persons by law allowed to affirm or declare instead of swearing, General Clauses Act,

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Declaratively - 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.

Oath

nor a Jew, the oath shall be administered in any manner which is now lawful. The (English) Statutory Declarations Act, 1835, abolishes unnecessary and extra-judicial oaths, and empowers any justice of the peace, notary public, or other

Transubstantiation

Church calls Transubstantiation.'-Creed of Pope Pius IV., founded on Ch. iv., sess. xiii., of the Council of Trent. Declaration against Transubstantiation.-A Declaration (commonly called the 'Declaration against Transubstantiation') was required of all members of either House of

Trust

s. 7 [reproduced by s. 53 (1) (b) of the Law of Property Act, 1925], requires that 'all declarations or creations of trusts or confidences of any lands, tenements, or hereditaments shall be manifested and proved by

Keep your definitions linked to case research

protest

protest 1 : a solemn declaration of opinion and usually of disagreement: as a : a solemn written declaration by a notary public or

Bill of Rights

Bill of Rights, a declaration delivered by the Lords and Commons to the Prince and Princess of Orange, and afterwards enacted in Parliament,

Deed

in an appointment under a power or (before 1926) in a covenant to stand seised, or a simple declaration of uses, because such deeds themselves fulfil that office by limiting the estate to be created. (g) Tenendum.

Uses

or executed; distributable into:- (a) Those arising by act of parties, which were created either- (1) By express declaration in a feoffment, deed, etc. (2) By presumed intention in a will; (3) By certain considerations. (b) Those

Perjury

deals with false statements on oath otherwise than in a judicial proceeding, and s. 3 with false oaths, declarations, notices, etc., with reference to marriage; an offence under either of these sections is a misdemeanour and punishable

Simony

go to the Crown, and the Clerical Subscription Act, 1865 (28 & 29 Vict. c. 122), required a declaration against simony to be subscribed by every person about to be instituted or collated to any benefice or

Swear

Swear, includes affirming and declaring in the case of persons by law allowed to affirm or declare instead of swearing, General Clauses Act,

  • Last »

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