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Juridical Days - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: juridical days

Juridical days

Juridical days, days in court on which the laws are administered....


juridical act

juridical act in 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"] ...


juridical person

juridical person in the civil law of Louisiana : an entity (as a partnership or corporation) that is given rights and responsibilities compare natural person NOTE: The rights and responsibilities of a juridical person are distinct from those of the natural persons constituting it. ...


Juridical link

Juridical link, means a legal relationship between members of a potential class action, sufficient to make a single suit more efficient or effective than multiple suits, as when all members of the class have been similarly affected by an allegedly illegal regulation. Also termed juridical relationship, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 854....


doctor of juridical science

doctor of juridical science often cap D&J&S : doctor of the science of law ...


juridical

juridical [Latin juridicus, from jur- jus law + dicere to say] 1 : of or relating to the administration of justice or the office of a judge [raises a question regarding trial] 2 : of or relating to law or jurisprudence : legal [nowhere in… opinions can we discover any overriding rule "Brown v. Superior Court of Sacramento Cty., 655 P.2d 1260 (1982)"] ...


Juridic

Pertaining to a judge or to jurisprudence acting in the distribution of justice used in courts of law according to law legal as juridical law...


Juridically

In a juridical manner...


Juridical

Juridical, acting in the distribution of justice...


Days of grace

Days of grace. Time of indulgence granted to an acceptor for the payment of his bill of exchange. It was originally a gratuitous favour (hence the name), but custom has rendered it a legal right.The number of these days varies according to the ancient custom or express law prevailing in each particular country. In the (English) United Kingdom, by the Bills of Exchange Act, 1882 (45 & 46 Vict. c. 61), s. 14, 'where a bill' (i.e., a bill of exchange or promissory note) 'is not payable on demand, the day on which it falls due is determined as follows:-Three days, called days of grace, are, in every case where the bill itself does not otherwise provide, added to the time of payment as fixed by the bill, and the bill is due and payable on the last day of grace,' with a proviso that where the last day of grace falls on Sunday, Christmas Day, or Good Friday, or a public fast or thanksgiving day, the bill is payable on the preceding business day, or on the succeeding business day if the last d...


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