Legal Term Dictionary

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  • QUOD PARTES REPLACITENT
    That the parties do replead. The form of the judgment on award of a repleader. 2 Salk. 579.
  • QUOD PARTITIO FIAT
    That partition be made. The name of the judgment in a suit for partition, directing that a partition be effected. Quod pendet non est pro eo quasi sit. What is in suspense is considered as not existing during such suspense. Dig. 50, 17, 109, 1. Quod per me non possum, More...
  • QUOD PERMITTAT
    That he permit In old English law. A writ which lay for the heir of him that was disseised of his common of pasture, against the heir of the disseisor. Cowell.
  • QUOD PERMITTAT PROSTERNERE
    That he permit to abate. In old practice. A writ in the nature of a writ of right which lay to abate a nuisance. 3 Bl. Comm. 221. And see Conhocton Stone Road v. Buffalo, etc., R. Co., 51 N. Y. 579, 10 Am. Rep. 646; Powell v. Furniture.Co., 34 More...
  • QUOD PERSONA NEC PREBENDARII, ETC
    A writ which lay for spiritual persons, distrained in their spiritual possessions, for payment of a fifteenth with the rest of the parish. Fitzh. Nat Brev. 175. Obsolete. Quod populus postromum jussit, id jus ratum esto. What the people have last enacted, let that be the established law. A law More...
  • QUOD PROSTRAVIT
    That he do abate. The name of a judgment upon an indictment for a nuisance, that the defendant abate such nuisance. Quod pure debetur present! die debe-tur. That which is due unconditionally is due now. Tray. Leg. Max. 519. Quod quis en culpa sua damnum sentit non intelligitur damnum sentire. More...
  • QUOD RECUPERET
    That he recover The ordinary form of judgments for the plaintiff in actions at law. 1 Archb. Pr. K. B. 225; 1 Burrill, Pr. 246. Quod remedio destituitur ipsa re valet si oulpa absit. That which is without remedy avails of Itself, if there be no fault in the party More...
  • QUOD SI CONTINGAT
    That if it happen. Words by which a condition might formerly be created in a deed. Litt. f 330. Quod sub eerta forma oonoeasum eel reservatum est non trahitur ad valorem vel oompensationem. That which is granted or reserved under a certain form is not [permitted to be] drawn into More...
  • QUOD VIDE
    Which see. A direction to the reader to look to another part of the hook, or to another book, there named, for further information. Quod voluit non dixit. What he intended he did not say, or express. An answer sometimes made in overruling an argument that the law-maker or testator More...
  • QUONIAM ATTACHIAMENTA
    (Since the attachments.) One of the oldest books in the Scotch law. So called from the two first words of the volume. Jacob; Whishaw.
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