![]() |
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Admonish
AdmonishTo advise or caution. For example the court may caution or admonish counsel for wrong practices. RELATED TERMS-------------------------------------- Caution 1) It signifies, sometimes, security, or security promised. Generally every writing is called cautio, a caution by which any object is provided for. 2) Turatory, Scotch law. Juratory caution is that which a suspender swears is the best he can offer in order to obtain a suspension. Where the suspender cannot, from his low or suspected circumstances, procure unquestionable security, juratory caution is admitted. Example An example is a case put to illustrate a. principle. Court A body in government to which the administration of justice is delegated. Admonish To advise or caution. For example the court may caution or admonish counsel for wrong practices. Counsel 1) Advice given to another as to what he ought to do or not to do. 2) An officer of court. One who undertakes to conduct suits and actions in court. The same as counsellor. 3) Practice, Criminal law. In the oath of the grand jurors, there is a provision requiring them to keep secret " the commonwealth's counsel, their fellows, and their own." In this sense this word is synonymous with knowledge. Wrong An injury; a tort a violation of right. In its most usual sense, wrong signifies an injury committed to the person or property of another, or to his relative rights, unconnected with contract; and these wrongs are committed with or without force. But in a more extended signification, wrong includes the violation of a contract; a failure by a man to perform his undertaking or promise is a wrong or injury to him to whom it was made. SIMILAR TERMS-------------------------------------- Admonition A reprimamd from a judge to a person accused, on being discharged, warning him of the consequences of his conduct, and intimating to him, that should he be guilty of the same fault for which he has been admonished, he will be punished with greater severity. PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS-------------------------------------- Admissible Any form of testimony or evidence that is allowed into court. Admissible evidence Evidence that can be legally and properly introduced in a civil or criminal trial. Admission In corporations or companies. The act of the corporation or company by which an individual acquires the rights of a member of such corporation or company. Admissions 1) It, frequently occurs in practice, that in order to save expenses as to mere formal proofs, the attorneys on each side consent to admit, reciprocally, certain facts in the cause without calling for proof of them. 2) Of attorneys and counselors. To entitle counsellors and attorneys to practice in court, they must be admitted by the court to practice there. Different statutes and rules have been made to regulate their admission; they generally require a previous qualification by study under the direction of some practicing counsellor or attorney. Admittance English law. The act of giving possession of a copyhold estate, as livery of seisin is of a freehold; it is of three kinds, namely uponavoluntary grant by the lord, upon a surrender by the former tenant and upon descent. Admonish Admonition A reprimamd from a judge to a person accused, on being discharged, warning him of the consequences of his conduct, and intimating to him, that should he be guilty of the same fault for which he has been admonished, he will be punished with greater severity. Adnepos A term employed by the Romans to designate male descendants in the fifth degree, in a direct line. This term is used in making genealogical tables. Adolescence Persons.That age which follows puberty and precedes the age of majority; it commences for males at fourteen, and for females at twelve years completed, and continues till twenty-one years complete. Adoption Civil law. The act by which a person chooses another from a strange family, to have all the rights of his own child. Adr Abbreviation for alternative dispute resolution. We thank you for using the Juridical Dictionary to search for Admonish. If you have a better definition for Admonish than the one presented here, please let us know by making use of the suggest a term option. This definition of Admonish may be disputed by other professionals. Our attempt is to provide easy definitions on Admonish and any other medical topic for the public at large.
|
|||||||||||||||
| © Juridical Dictionary 2005. All rights reserved. | ||||||||||||||||