thereabouts
thereabouts, adv. Near that time or place (Schreuer was seen in Rudolf Place or thereabouts). — Also termed thereabout.
thereabouts, adv. Near that time or place (Schreuer was seen in Rudolf Place or thereabouts). — Also termed thereabout.
on or about. Approximately; at or around the time specified. • This language is used in pleading to prevent a variance between the pleading and the proof, usu. when there is any uncertainty about the exact date of a pivotal event. When used in nonpleading contexts, the phrase is mere jargon.
time immemorial. 1. A point in time so far back that no living person has knowledge or proof contradicting the right or custom alleged to have existed since then. • At common law, that time was fixed as the year 1189, the year that Henry II of England died. — Also termed time out of
time-price doctrine. The rule that if a debt arises out of a purchase and sale, the usury laws do not apply. • If a higher price is charged for a deferred payment than for an immediate payment, the difference between the time price and the cash price is deemed compensation to the seller for the
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A prison term that is to be served without the benefit of time-reduction allowances for good behavior and the like.
blackout period. Trademarks. The time between the examining attorney’s approval of an intent-to-use application for publication in the Official Gazette and the issuance of a notice of allowance after publication, during which the applicant may not file a statement of use or make any other substantive amendment to the application. [Cases: Trade Regulation 214. C.J.S.
out of order. 1. (Of a motion) not in order (the motion is out of order because it conflicts with the bylaws). See IN ORDER. • A motion may be “out of order” because it is inherently inappropriate for the deliberative assembly’s consideration at any time (e.g., because it proposes an unlawful action). A motion
ex tempore (eks tem-p[schwa]-ree), adv. [Latin “out of time”] 1. By lapse of time. 2. Without any preparation; extemporaneously.
Salic law (sal-ik orsay-lik). An influential early medieval Frankish code of law that originated with the Salian Franks and that deals with a variety of civil property and family issues but is primarily a penal code listing the punishments for various crimes. • Salic law is the principal compilation of the early Germanic laws known
agreed-boundary doctrine. The principle by which adjacent landowners resolve uncertainties over land boun-daries by permanently fixing the boundaries by agreement; specif., the rule that owners of contiguous land may agree on the boundary between the parcels, as long as the actual boundary is uncertain, there is agreement between the two owners about the boundary line,
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