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Legal Latin Phrases Starting with phrase number 176
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- Culpa in eligendo - Negligence in choice (decision) (Legal Term - Compare Culpa in vigilando)
- Culpa in faciendo - Guilt by doing (Legal term)
- Culpa in omittendo - Guilt by omission (Legal term)
- Culpa in vigilando - Negligence in vigilance (Legal Term - Compare Culpa in eligendo)
- Culpa lata - Gross negligence (Legal Term - compare with Culpa Levis - Defined in Digest 50, 16, 213)
- Culpa levis - Slight negligence (Legal Term - compare with Culpa Lata)
- Culpa par odium exigit - The offense requires a proportional rejection (Legal term - Seneca)
- Culpa ubi maior est, ibi gravior debet esse poena - The greater the guilt, the more severe the punishment should be. (Legal term)
- Culpa ubi non est, nec poena esse debet - Where there is no guilt, there should be no punishment (Legal term)
- Culpa vacare maximum est solacium - To be relieved of guild is the greatest solace (Legal term)
- Cum finis est licitus etiam media sunt licita - When the end is legal, the means are legal (Legal and Philosophic term written in 1650 by the Jesuit priest Hermann Busenbaum 1600-1688 - Also known as "The end justifies the means")
- Cum hoc ergo propter hoc - With this, therefore because of this (Legal and philosophical term - A fallacy that confuses cause and effect)
- Curator ad litem - Guardian for the lawsuit (Legal term - a person assigned by the cour to represent a minor)
- Da mihi factum, dabo tibi ius - Give me the facts, and I will give you justice (Legal term)
- Damnum absque iniuria - Damage without injury (Legal term)
- Damnum non facit qui iure suo uttitur - Harms no one, the one who uses his legal rights (Legal Term)
- Datio in solutum - Giving in payment (Legal term - transfer of goods in lieu of payment)
- De auditu - By hearing (Legal term - e.g. testimonium de auditu)
- De bene esse - Of well being (Legal term - Conditionally, good enough)
- De cuius succesione agitur - The person who is succeeded (Legal term)
- De facto - In fact (Legal term - In reality, as opposed to what the law says Ad iure - Also see Ipso facto)
- De iure - In law (Legal term - As opposed to facts Ad facto - Also see ipso iure)
- De jure, de facto - Under law, matter of fact (Legal term)
- De lege ferenda - what the law ought to be (Legal Term - as opposed to what the law is)
- De lege lata - What the law is (Legal Term - as opposed to what the law ought to be)
Total: 648
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