Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Ex visitatione dei






Ex visitatione dei

By or from the visitation of God. This phrase is frequently employed in inquisitions by the coroner, where it signifies that the death of the deceased is a natural one.

RELATED TERMS
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Visitation
The right of the parent who does not have physical custody to see his or her child.

God
"From the Saxon god, good. The source of all good; the supreme being. Every man is presumed to believe in God, and he who opposes a witness on the ground of his unbelief is bound to prove it. By article 1, of amendments to the Constitution of the United States, it is provided that ""Congress shall make no laws respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."" In the United States, therefore, every one is allowed to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience.

Employed
One who is in the service of another. Such a person is entitled to rights and liable to.perform certain duties.

Coroner
A public official who holds an inquiry into violent or suspicious deaths. A coroner has the power to summon people to the inquest.

Death
Cessation of life; extinction of political existence.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Ex vi termini
By force of the term; as a bond ex vi termini imports a sealed instrument.



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Ex rel
An abbreviation of "ex relatione", Latin for "on the relation of." Refers to information or action taken that is not based on first-hand experience but is based on the statement or account of another person. For example, a criminal charge "ex rel" simply means that the attorney general of a state is prosecuting on the basis of a statement of a person other than the attorney general himself (or herself.)

Ex tempore
From the time without premeditation.

Ex turpi causa
An abbreviation of the Latin maxim "ex turpi causa non oritur actio", meaning "from a base cause no action arises". The legal principle thus expressed is that, on grounds of public policy, no court will lend its aid to a party who founds his cause of action on an illegal or an immoral act.

Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
A Latin maxim, meaning "from a base cause no action arises". The legal principle thus expressed is that, on grounds of public policy, no court will lend its aid to a party who founds his cause of action on an illegal or an immoral act.

Ex vi termini
By force of the term; as a bond ex vi termini imports a sealed instrument.

Ex visitatione dei

Exaction
Torts. A willful wrong done by an officer, or by one who, under color of his office, takes more fee or pay for his services than what the law allows.

Examination-in-chief
The questioning of your own witness under oath. Witnesses are introduced to a trial by their examination-in-chief, which is when they answer questions asked by the lawyer representing the party which called them to the stand. After their examination-in-chief, the other party's lawyer can question them too; this is called "cross-examination".

Examined copy
This phrase is applied to designate a paper which is a copy of a record, public book, or register, and which has been compared with the original.

Examiners
Practice. Persons appointed to question students of law, in order to ascertain their qualifications before they are admitted to practice.

Example
An example is a case put to illustrate a. principle.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.