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  1. Latin Legal Terms Here you can find latin legal terms used both in Ancient Rome and in the present times, in the modern legal system. If a certain expression has two or more possible translations, here we give you only what it means in the legal context.

  2. Latin Legal Terms. The definition list below gives Latin to English translations for the most commonly used latin law terms. A Ab extra Definition: From outside Ab inito Definition: From The beginning Accessorius sequitur Definition: One who is an accessory to the crime cannot be guilty of a more serious crime than the principal offender Actus reus

  3. 1. an assured statement made; 2. completion of a will and all its parts to make it valid and legal; 3). book of facts and law presented in a Canadian court A type of contract wherein one party agrees to do work for the other, in order that the second party can then perform some work for the first in exchange.

  4. 1. In French-law-based systems, refers to the legal operation, activity, or fact embodied or memorialized by a legal instrument (as opposed to the instrument itself, known as an instrumentum ); 2. In German-law-based systems, refers to a transactional act, the main sub-type of legal acts. See also actus iuridicus.

  5. Res judicata. In Latin, res judicata means “a matter judged” or “a matter decided.”. It’s a legal principle that means a case has had a final judgment, meaning no further appeals or legal actions by the parties involved can happen again in the future. It can be used by a court to deny reconsideration of a case or matter.

  6. A collection of Latin Legal Terms and Maxims that are often used in Judicial and Legal documents. This collection is also good for reference or as a quick refresher while preparing for various PG & LLM entrance exams such as the CLAT PG LLM, AILET PG LLM, various State LLM entrance tests and the Judicial Services i.e. Civil Judge Junior Division or Judicial Magistrate preliminary examinations.

  7. Common Latin Phrases. a fortiori = with yet stronger reason. a posse ad esse = from possibility to actuality. a posteriori = derived by reasoning from observed facts. a priori = from what was before. ab incunablis = from the origin. ab initio = from the beginning. ab intra = from within. ab urbe condita (AUC) = from the founding of the city ...