Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Plene administravit praeter






Plene administravit praeter

This is the usual plea of plene administravit, except that the defendant admits a certain amount of assets in his hands.

RELATED TERMS
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Plea
1) Chancery practice. "A plea," says Lord Bacon, speaking of proceedings in courts of equity, "is a foreign matter to discharge or stay the suit." 2) Practice. The defendant's answer by matter of fact, to the plaintiff's declaration.

Defendant
A party who is sued in a personal action.

Assets
Cash, property and investments along with anything else that may be of value to a individual or business.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Plena probatio
A term used in the civil law, to signify full proof, in contradistinction to semi-plena probatio, which is only a presumption.

Plenarty
Ecclesiastical law. Signifies that a benefice is full.

Plenary
Full, complete.

Plene administravit
Pleading. A plea in bar entered by an executor or administrator by which he affirms that he had not in his possession at the time of the commencement of the suit, nor has had at any time since any goods of the deceased to be administered; when the plaintiff replies that the defendant had goods, &c., in his possession at that time, and the parties join issue, the burden of the proof will be on the plaintiff.

Plene computavit
Pleading. A plea in an action of account render, by which the defendant avers that he has fully accounted. Bac. Ab. Accompt, E. This plea does not admit the liability of the defendant to account.

Plenipotentiary
Possessing full powers; as, a minister plenipotentiary, is one authorized fully to settle the matters connected with his mission, subject however to the ratification of the government by which he is authorized.

Plenum dominium
The unlimited right which the owner has to use his property as he deems proper, without accountability to any one.



PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
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Plegiis acquietandis, writ de
The name of an ancient writ in the English law, which lies where a man becomes pledge or surety for another to pay a certain sum of money at a certain day; after the day, if the debtor does not pay the debt, and the. surety be compelled to pay, he shall have this writ to compel the debtor to pay the same.

Plena probatio
A term used in the civil law, to signify full proof, in contradistinction to semi-plena probatio, which is only a presumption.

Plenarty
Ecclesiastical law. Signifies that a benefice is full.

Plenary
Full, complete.

Plene administravit
Pleading. A plea in bar entered by an executor or administrator by which he affirms that he had not in his possession at the time of the commencement of the suit, nor has had at any time since any goods of the deceased to be administered; when the plaintiff replies that the defendant had goods, &c., in his possession at that time, and the parties join issue, the burden of the proof will be on the plaintiff.

Plene administravit praeter

Plene computavit
Pleading. A plea in an action of account render, by which the defendant avers that he has fully accounted. Bac. Ab. Accompt, E. This plea does not admit the liability of the defendant to account.

Plenipotentiary
Possessing full powers; as, a minister plenipotentiary, is one authorized fully to settle the matters connected with his mission, subject however to the ratification of the government by which he is authorized.

Plenum dominium
The unlimited right which the owner has to use his property as he deems proper, without accountability to any one.

Plimsoll line
A mark painted on the side of merchant vessels showing the various draught levels to which the ship may be loaded, usually including tropical fresh water, fresh water, tropical sea water, summer sea water, winter sea water and (for vessels under 100 meters in length) winter North Atlantic Ocean water. The Plimsoll line is accompanied by a circle bisected by a horizontal line, indicating the summer freeboard of the ship and letters signifying the name of the ship's classification society.

Plough-bote
An allowance made to a rural tenant, of wood sufficient for ploughs, harrows, carts, and other instruments of hushandry.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.