Search Results for: EXHIBIT

appendix

appendix, n. 1. A supplementary document attached to the end of a writing (the brief includes an appendix of exhibits). • For the requirements of an appendix to a federal appellate brief, see Fed. R. App. P. 30. 2. English law. A volume that contains material documents and other evidence presented in a lower court. […]

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article

article, n. 1. Generally, a particular item or thing (article of clothing). proprietary article. (often pl.) A product manufactured under an exclusive right to sell it. 2. A separate and distinct part (as a clause or stipulation) of a writing, esp. in a contract, statute, or constitution (Article III). 3. (pl.) An instrument containing a

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interdict

interdict v. 禁止 n. (1)(教会法)褫夺教权的禁令 指一种教会的惩罚〔ecclesiastical censure〕,禁止特定的人或在特定地区举行宗教仪式〔divine services〕。该惩罚于英国宗教改革后废止,而美国从无此种禁令。 (2)禁令 1罗马法中,禁令系裁判官〔praetor〕据以直接命令何事应为或应不为的裁决〔decree〕,特定案件以赦令〔edict〕决定。禁令尤其用于涉及占有或准占有的案件。禁令分三类:禁止禁令〔prohibitory〕、出示禁令〔exhibitory〕与复原禁令〔restorative〕。作为一种救济方式,禁令曾较诉讼广为使用,但后来使用渐少,优士丁尼时已基本废止。现代民法中,禁令可视为与诉讼相同,尽管它们引起的是简易程序;2在大陆法中,指因某人心智不全而剥夺其处理自身事务的权利;3在国际法上,是指政府发布的禁止两国间商业往来的贸易禁令,目的在于暂时停止任何形式的贸易。

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sale by sample

A sale in which the parties understand that the goods exhibited constitute the standard with which the goods not exhibited correspond and to which all deliveries should conform. • Any sample that is made part of the basis of the bargain creates an express warranty that the whole of the goods will conform to the

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infidelitas

infidelitas (in-fi-dee-l[schwa]-tas or -del-[schwa]-tas), n. [Latin] Hist. Infidelity; faithlessness to one’s feudal oath. “Many of the smaller misdeeds were regarded as exhibitions of an infidelitas, which, however, did not amount to a felonia.” 2 Frederick Pollock & Frederic W. Maitland, The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I 513–14 (2d ed. 1899).

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limited admissibility

The principle that testimony or exhibits may be admitted into evidence for a restricted purpose. • Common examples are admitting prior contradictory testimony to impeach a witness but not to establish the truth, and admitting evidence against one party but not another. The trial court must, upon request, instruct the jury properly about the applicable

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