Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Cum pertinentis






Cum pertinentis

With the appurtenances.

RELATED TERMS
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Appurtenances
In common parlance and legal acceptation, is used to signify something belonging to another thing as principal, and which passes as incident to the principal thing.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Cum onere
This term is usually employed to show that something is taken, subject to a charge or burden.



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Cul de sac
This is a French phrase, which signifies, literally, the bottom of a bag, and, figuratively, a street not open at both ends. It seems not to be settled whether a cul de sac is to be considered a highway.

Culpa
A fault committed without fraud, and this distinguishes it from dolus, which is a trick to deceive.

Culpa lata
Latin for gross negligence. It is more than just simple negligence and includes any action or an omission in reckless disregard of the consequences to the safety or property of another.

Culprit
Criminal law. When a prisoner is arraigned, and he pleads not guilty, in the English practice, the clerk, who arraigns him on behalf of the crown, replies that the prisoner is guilty, and that he is ready to prove the accusation.

Cum onere
This term is usually employed to show that something is taken, subject to a charge or burden.

Cum pertinentis

Cumul
The combination of contractual and extra-contractual recourses in a single claim or suit. “Cumul” is acceptable in common law jurisdictions. Civil law on the other hand usually resolves the tort/contract problems by prohibiting the “cumul” and usually imposing the contractual relationship.

Cumulative
Forming a heap

Cumulative legacy
Accumulative legacy. An accumulative legacy is a second bequest given by the same testator to the same legatee, whether it be of the same kind of thing, as money, or whether it be of different things, as, one hundred dollars, in one legacy, and a thousand dollars in another, or whether the sums are equal or whether the legacies are of a different naturer.

Cumulative sentences
Sentences for two or more crimes to run consecutively, rather than concurrently.

Curable depreciation
Items of physical deterioration and functional obsolescence that are economically feasible to cure.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.