Presumingly - Law Dictionary Search Results
presumed damages
presumed damages see damage
Children
Children. The word child in legal documents means a legitimate child unless otherwise declared by statute. See Morris v. Britannic Assurance Co., 1931 (2) KB 125. 'Child' is defined by the (English) Children and Young Persons...
Age
Age, the criminal responsibility of males and females, and their power to do certain acts, depends upon their age. A child under 7 cannot commit any offence; between the ages of 7 and 14 is presumed...
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Consideration
Consideration. Any act of the promisee (the person claiming the benefit of an obligation) from which the promisor (the person burdened with the obligation) or a stranger derives a benefit or advantage, or any labour detriment...
Omnia pr'sumuntur solemniter [or rite] esse acta
Omnia pr'sumuntur solemniter [or rite] esse acta. Co. Litt. 6, (All things are presumed to have been done rightly.) Similarly, Omnia pr'sumuntur rite et solemniter esse acta donec probetur incontrarium. Co. Litt. 232, (All things are...
Satisfaction
Satisfaction, legal compensation; the recompense for an injury done, or the payment of money due and owing. See ACCORD. The giving of something with the intention, express or implied, that it is to extinguish some existing...
Rasure, or Erasure
Rasure, or Erasure, the act of scraping or shaving. Means the scraping or shaving of a document's surface to remove the writing from it, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., 1268. Rasure of a deed, so as...
Presumption of survivorship
Presumption of survivorship. Where two or more persons perish by the same calamity, the Civil Law presumes that the stronger survived. The common law of England recognized no such presumption, but by the Law of Property...
Presumption of life or death
Presumption of life or death. Where a person is once shown to have been living, the law will in general presume that he is still alive, unless after a lapse of time considerably exceeding the ordinary...
Presumption of fact and presumption in of law
Presumption of fact and presumption in of law, presumptions are of three types: (1) Permissive presumptions or presumptions of fact. (2) Com-pelling presumptions or resumption of law (rebuttable). (3) Irrebuttable presumption of law or 'conclusive proof'....
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Presumingly - Law Dictionary Search Results
presumed damages
presumed damages see damage
Children
Children. The word child in legal documents means a legitimate child unless otherwise declared by statute. See Morris v. Britannic Assurance Co., 1931 (2) KB 125. 'Child' is defined by the (English) Children and Young Persons...
Age
Age, the criminal responsibility of males and females, and their power to do certain acts, depends upon their age. A child under 7 cannot commit any offence; between the ages of 7 and 14 is presumed...
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Consideration
Consideration. Any act of the promisee (the person claiming the benefit of an obligation) from which the promisor (the person burdened with the obligation) or a stranger derives a benefit or advantage, or any labour detriment...
Omnia pr'sumuntur solemniter [or rite] esse acta
Omnia pr'sumuntur solemniter [or rite] esse acta. Co. Litt. 6, (All things are presumed to have been done rightly.) Similarly, Omnia pr'sumuntur rite et solemniter esse acta donec probetur incontrarium. Co. Litt. 232, (All things are...
Satisfaction
Satisfaction, legal compensation; the recompense for an injury done, or the payment of money due and owing. See ACCORD. The giving of something with the intention, express or implied, that it is to extinguish some existing...
Rasure, or Erasure
Rasure, or Erasure, the act of scraping or shaving. Means the scraping or shaving of a document's surface to remove the writing from it, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., 1268. Rasure of a deed, so as...
Presumption of survivorship
Presumption of survivorship. Where two or more persons perish by the same calamity, the Civil Law presumes that the stronger survived. The common law of England recognized no such presumption, but by the Law of Property...
Presumption of life or death
Presumption of life or death. Where a person is once shown to have been living, the law will in general presume that he is still alive, unless after a lapse of time considerably exceeding the ordinary...
Presumption of fact and presumption in of law
Presumption of fact and presumption in of law, presumptions are of three types: (1) Permissive presumptions or presumptions of fact. (2) Com-pelling presumptions or resumption of law (rebuttable). (3) Irrebuttable presumption of law or 'conclusive proof'....
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