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Perfect
PerfectSomething complete. SIMILAR TERMS-------------------------------------- Perfidy The act of one who has engaged his faith to do a thing, and does not do it, but does the contrary. Performance The act of doing something; the thing done is also called a performance. PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS-------------------------------------- Peremptory Absolute; positive. A final determination to act without hope of renewing or altering. Peremptory challenge Request by a party that a judge not allow a certain prospective juror as a member of the jury. No reason or cause need be stated. Peremptory defence Equity, pleading. A defence which insists that the plaintiff never had the right to institute the suit, or that if he had, the original right is extinguished or determined. Peremptory defense That the plaintiff never had, or has not now, a right of action.Sham defense. A mere pretense of a defense, set up in bad faith, and without color of fact. Peremptory plea Pleading. A plea which denies the plaintiff's cause of action. Perfect Perfidy The act of one who has engaged his faith to do a thing, and does not do it, but does the contrary. Performance The act of doing something; the thing done is also called a performance. Peril The accident by which a thing is lost. Peril of the sea Peril of the sea is some catastrophic force or event that would not be expected in the area of the voyage, at that time of year and that could not be reasonably guarded against. Perils of the sea Contracts. Bills of lading generally contain an exception that the carrier shall not be liable for "perils of the sea." What is the precise import of this phrase is not perhaps very exactly settled. In a 'strict sense, the words perils of the sea, denote the natural accidents peculiar to the sea; but in more than one instance they have been held to extend to events not attributable to natural causes. For instance, they have been held to include a capture by pirates on the high sea and a case of loss by collision by two ships, where no blame is imputable to either, or at all events not to the injured ship. We thank you for using the Juridical Dictionary to search for Perfect. If you have a better definition for Perfect than the one presented here, please let us know by making use of the suggest a term option. This definition of Perfect may be disputed by other professionals. Our attempt is to provide easy definitions on Perfect and any other medical topic for the public at large.
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