Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Dative




Dative

That which may be given or disposed of at will and pleasure. It sometimes means that which is not cast upon the party by the law, or by a testator, but which is given by the magistrate; in this sense it is that tutorship is dative, when the tutor is appointed by the malistrate.

RELATED TERMS
--------------------------------------

Will
A will is a legal document in which a person directs how his property is to be distributed after his death. Such documents must be executed in due form and must be duly witnessed.

Party
Practice, contracts. When applied to practice, by party is understood either the plaintiff or defendant. In contracts, a party is one or more persons who engage to perform or receive the performance of some agreement.

Law
A rule or body of rules of conduct inherent in human nature and essential to or binding upon human society. The learned profession that is mastered by graduate study in a law school and that is responsible for the judicial system.

Testator
One who has made a testament or will.

Magistrate
Mun. law. A public civil officer, invested with some part of the legislative, executive, or judicial power given by the constitution. In a narrower sense this term includes only inferior judicial officers, as justices of the peace.

Tutorship
The power which an individual, sui juris, has to take care of the person of one who is unable to take care of himself. Tutorship differs from curatorship.

Dative
That which may be given or disposed of at will and pleasure. It sometimes means that which is not cast upon the party by the law, or by a testator, but which is given by the magistrate; in this sense it is that tutorship is dative, when the tutor is appointed by the malistrate.

When
1) At which time, in wills, standing by itself unqualified and unexplained, this is a word of condition denoting the time at which the gift is to continence. 2) The context of a will may show that the word when is to be applied to the possession only, not to the vesting of a legacy; but to justify this construction, there must be circumstances, or other expressions in the will, showing such to have been the testator's intent.

Tutor
Civil law. A person who has been lawfully appointed to the care of the person and property of a minor.



SIMILAR TERMS
--------------------------------------

Dation
Civil law, contracts. The act of giving something.



PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
--------------------------------------

Darrein
corruption of the French word "dernier," the last.

Darrein seisin
The name of a plea to a writ of entry or a writ of right.

Data protection
Under the Data Protection Act 1984, those holding personal data on computer (where the data relates to identifiable individuals) must observe certain principles in how the data is held and in respect of the collection, holding, disclosure, use and granting of access to that data. In particular they must register with the Data Protection Agency.

Date
Latin datum, a thing given. The primary signification is time "given" or specified, - in some way ascertained and fixed. In the ancient form the clause ran: datum apud, etc., specifying the place and time; thence called the datum clause, afterward shortened to "date".

Dation
Civil law, contracts. The act of giving something.

Dative

Daughter
An immediate female descendant.

Daughter-in-law
In Latin, nurus, is the wife of one's son.

Day book
Merchant law. An account book, in which merchants and others make entries of their daily transactions. This is generally a book of original entries, and as such may be given in evidence to prove the sale and delivery, of merchandise or of work done.

Day rule
Day rule or Day writ. English practice. A rule or order of the court, by which a prisoner on civil process, and not committed, is enabled, in term time, to go out of the prison, and its rule or bounds.

Day writ
Day writ or Day rule. English practice. A rule or order of the court, by which a prisoner on civil process, and not committed, is enabled, in term time, to go out of the prison, and its rule or bounds.

We thank you for using the Juridical Dictionary to search for Dative. If you have a better definition for Dative than the one presented here, please let us know by making use of the suggest a term option. This definition of Dative may be disputed by other professionals. Our attempt is to provide easy definitions on Dative and any other medical topic for the public at large.
 

This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







ative / dtive / daive / datve / datie / dativ / ddative / daative / dattive / datiive / dativve / dativee / eative / rative / fative / vative / cative / xative / sative / wative / dqtive / dwtive / dstive / dxtive / dztive / da5ive / da6ive / dayive / dahive / dagive / dafive / darive / da4ive / datve / datice / datide / datife / datige / datibe / dati e / dativ3 / dativ4 / dativr / dativf / dativd / dativs / dativw /