Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

De bene esse






De bene esse

Practice. A technical phrase applied to certain proceedings which are deemed to be well done for the present, or until an exception or other avoidance, that is, conditionally, and in that meaning the phrase is usually accepted.

RELATED TERMS
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Practice
The form, manner and order of conducting and carrying on suits or prosecutions in the courts through their various stages, according, to the principles of law, and the rules laid down by the respective courts.

Technical
That which properly belongs to an art.

Well
A hole dug in the earth in order to obtain water.

Present
A gift, or wore properly the thing given. It is provided by the constitution of the United States, that "no person holding any office of profit or trust under them, [the United States] shall, without the consent of congress, accept of any present, emolument, or office, or title of any kind whatever, from any king, prince, or foreign state."

Exception
1) English Eq. practice. Re-interrogation. 2) Legislation, construction. Exceptions are rules which limit the extent of other more general rules, and render that just and proper, which would be, on account of its generality, unjust and improper.

Avoidance
1) Ecclesiastical law. It is when a benefice becomes vacant for want of an incumbent; and, in this sense, it is opposed to plenarty. 2) Pleading. The introductiou of new or special matter, which, admitting the premises of the opposite party, avoids or repels his conclusions.



SIMILAR TERMS
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De bonis
Of, for, or concerning goods or property.

De bonis asportatis
(United Kingdom) Of goods carried away .

De bonis non
This phrase is used in cases where the goods of a deceased person have not all been administered. When an executor or administrator has been appointed, and the estate is not fully settled, and the executor or administrator is dead, has absconded, or from any cause has been removed, a second administrator is appointed to to perform the duty remaining to be done, who is called an administrator de bonis non, an administrator of the goods not administered and he becomes by the appointment the only representative of the deceased.

De bonis propriis
Of his own goods. When an executor or administrator has been guilty of a devastavit, he is responsible for the loss which the estate has sustained, de bonis propriis.



PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
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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.

Days in bank
English practice. Days of appearance in the court of common pleas, usually called bancum.

Days of the week
These are Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday.

De
A preposition used in many Latin phrases - as, de bone esse, de bonis non.

De arbitratione facta, writ
In the ancient English law, when an action was brought for the same cause of action which had been before settled by arbitration, this writ was brought.

De bene esse

De bonis
Of, for, or concerning goods or property.

De bonis asportatis
(United Kingdom) Of goods carried away .

De bonis non
This phrase is used in cases where the goods of a deceased person have not all been administered. When an executor or administrator has been appointed, and the estate is not fully settled, and the executor or administrator is dead, has absconded, or from any cause has been removed, a second administrator is appointed to to perform the duty remaining to be done, who is called an administrator de bonis non, an administrator of the goods not administered and he becomes by the appointment the only representative of the deceased.

De bonis propriis
Of his own goods. When an executor or administrator has been guilty of a devastavit, he is responsible for the loss which the estate has sustained, de bonis propriis.

De contumace capiendo
The name of a writ issued for the arrest of a defendant who is in contempt of the ecclesiastical court.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.