Tales - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: talesDecem tales
Decem tales (ten such). If, when a trial at bar (see BAR, TRIAL AT) is called on, a sufficient number of jurors do not attend, the trial must be adjourned, and a decem or octo tales, according to the number deficient, awarded, as at Common Law; for the County Juries Act, 1825 (6 Geo. 4, c. 50), s. 37, which allows the tales de circumstantibus, is expressly confined to trials at Nisi Prius and the assizes, 1 Chit. Arch. Pract....
tales
tales often attrib [from the Medieval Latin phrase tales de circumstantibus such (persons) of the bystanders; from the use of the phrase in the writ summoning them] : persons added to a jury from among those available in or about the courthouse or in the county to make up a deficiency in the number of jurors regularly summoned [a juror] ...
Circumstantibus, Tales de
Circumstantibus, Tales de (so many of the bystanders). In civil and criminal trials, where by reason of the default of the jury, or of challenge, there is not a sufficient number of the jurors impanelled, the judge may direct the sheriff to add to the panel the names of a sufficient number of persons qualified to act as jurymen who may be present or can be found, who are called tales de circumstantibus.-(English) County Juries Act, 1825 (6 Geo. 4, c. 50), s. 37. There is now no statutory limit to the number of jurors who can be impanelled.-(English) County Common Juries Act, 1910 (10 Edw. 7 & 1 Geo. 5, c. 17)....
Octo Tales
Octo Tales. See DECEM TALES....
Tales de circumstantibus
Tales de circumstantibus. If a sufficient number of jurors do not appear upon a trial, or if by means of challenges or exemptions a sufficient number of unexceptionable ones do not remain, either party may pray a tales; which is a supply of such men as are summoned upon the panel, in order to make up a deficiency. See County Juries Act, 1825 (6 Geo. 4, c. 50), s. 37, and JURY....
Romance
A species of fictitious writing originally composed in meter in the Romance dialects and afterward in prose such as the tales of the court of Arthur and of Amadis of Gaul hence any fictitious and wonderful tale a sort of novel especially one which treats of surprising adventures usually befalling a hero or a heroine a tale of extravagant adventures of love and the like...
talesman
talesman pl: tales·men [-mən] : a person summoned as one of the tales added to a jury ...
Slander
A false tale or report maliciously uttered tending to injure the reputation of another the malicious utterance of defamatory reports the dissemination of malicious tales or suggestions to the injury of another...
Bestiary
A treatise on beasts esp one of the moralizing or allegorical beast tales written in the Middle Ages...
bruin
A bear so called in popular tales and fables...
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