Ipso Jure - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: ipso jureipso jure
ipso jure [Latin] : by the law itself : by the operation of law [the securities sale was ipso jure unlawful] ...
Void ipso jure
Void ipso jure, void from the very inception, Yamunabai Anantrao Adhav v. Anantrao Shivaram Adhav, (1988) 1 SCC 530: AIR 1988 SC 644 (647)....
ipso facto clause
ipso facto clause : a clause in an agreement stipulating the consequences (as termination of a lease or acceleration of a payment) of the insolvency of one of the parties called also bankruptcy clause ipso facto bankruptcy clause NOTE: An ipso facto clause is invalid under the Bankruptcy Code because a trustee is not bound by any provision or applicable law that is conditioned on the debtor's insolvency. ...
ipso facto
ipso facto [New Latin, literally, by the fact itself] : by that very fact or act : as an inevitable result [drove the getaway car and was ipso facto an accessory] ...
Ipso facto
Ipso facto (by the very act itself). A censure of excommunication in the Ecclesiastical Court, immediately incurred for divers offences, after lawful trial....
de jure
de jure [Medieval Latin, literally, from the law] 1 : by right : of right [a de jure officer] 2 : in accordance with law see also de jure segregation at segregation compare de facto ...
Omnia que jure contrahuntur, contrario jure pereunt
Omnia que jure contrahuntur, contrario jure pereunt [Lat.], all things which are contracted by law perish by a contrary law....
Qui alterius jure utitur eodem jure uti debet
Qui alterius jure utitur eodem jure uti debet. Pothier, Tr. De Change, pt. 1, ch. 4, art. 5, s. 114; Broom's Leg. Max, (He who is clothed with the right of another ought to be clothed with the very same right.)...
Assignatus utitur jure auctoris
Assignatus utitur jure auctoris [Lat.], An assignee is clothed with the rights of his assignor.Assignatus utitur jure auctoris. Halk. 14, (The assignee makes use of the right of his assignor.) See Broom's Leg. Max....
De jure
De jure [Lat.] (by right), opposed to de facto. The most striking instance of the recognition by our law of the distinction between things de jure and de facto is found in the statute-book, which entitles the first Act of Parliament passed in the reign of Charles the Second as of the twelfth year of his reign, the previous years having been spent by him in exile, and the affairs of the kingdom having been conducted by the Protector. See DE FACTO...
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