Legal Term Dictionary

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  • NUNCUPARE
    Lat. In the civil law. To name; to pronounce orally or in words Without writing.
  • NUNCUPATE
    To declare publicly and "solemnly".
  • NUNCUPATIVE WILL
    A will Which depends merely upon oral evidence, having been declared or dictated by the testator in his last sickness before a sufficient number of witnesses, and afterwards reduced to writing. Ex parte Thompson, 4 Bradf. Sur. (N. Y.) 154; Sykes v. Sykes, 2 Stew. (Ala.) 367, 20 Am. Dec. More...
  • NUNDINIAE
    Lat. In the civil and old English law. A fair. In nundinis et mer-catis, in fairs and markets. Bract. foL 56.
  • NUNDINATION
    Traffic at fairs and markets; any buying and selling.Nunquam ereseit ex postfaeto prav. teriti delicti ssstimatio. The character of a past offense is never aggravated by a subsequent act or matter. Dig. 50, 17, 139, 1; Bac. Max. p. 88, reg. 8; Broom, Max. 42. Nunqnam decurritnr ad extraordinnv-rinm sed More...
  • NUNQUAM INDEBITATUS
    Lat. Never indebted. The name of a plea in an action of indebitatus assumpsit, by which the defendant alleges that he is not indebted to the plaintiff. Nunquam nimis dieitnr qnod nunqnam satis dieitnr. What is never sufficiently said is never said too much. Co. Litt 875. Nunquam prssscribitur in More...
  • NUNTIUS
    In old English practice. A messenger. One who was sent to make an excuse for a party summoned, or one who explained as for a friend the reason of a party's absence. Bract fol. 345. An officer of a court; a summoner, apparitor, or beadle. Cowell.
  • NUPER OBIIT
    Lat. In practice. The name of a writ (now abolished) which, in the English law, lay for a sister co-heiress dispossessed by her coparcener of lands and tenements whereof their father, brother, or any common ancestor died seised of an estate in fee-simple. Fitzh. Nat Brev. 197.
  • NUPTIAE SECUNDAE
    Lat. A second marriage. In the canon law, this term included any marriage subsequent to the first.
  • NUPTIAL
    Pertaining to marriage; constituting marriage; used or done in marriage. Nuptias non eoncubitus sod consensus faoit. Go. Litt. 38. Not cohabitation but consent makes the marriage.
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