Continuing Trespass A repeated or ongoing (not one-time) trespass (unlawful entry or possession), especially onto real property.
Trespasser: In civil law, a person who enters land without invitation, permission or privilege. Trial: The judicial examination and determination of issues between the parties to an action.
trespass n. entering another person's property without permission of the owner or his/her agent and without lawful authority and causing any damage, no matter how slight.
Trespass Wrongful interference with the use of the property of another. Trial Court A court of original jurisdiction which hears and tries a lawsuit.
TRESPASS torts. An unlawful act committed with violence, ti et armis, to the person, property or relative rights of another.
Trespassers The Occupiers' Liability Act 1984 requires all owners of property to take reasonable steps to make their premises safe for anyone who enters them, even those who enter as trespassers, if they are aware of a risk on the premises.
Trespass Unlawful interference with another's person, property or rights. Theoretically, all torts are trespasses. Trover ...
trespass Wrongful entry onto or interference with a property without the permission of the lawful owner or occupier. tribunal ...
Term: Trespass Definition: Wrongful interference with the use of the property of another. Term: Trial Court Definition: A court of original jurisdiction which hears and tries a lawsuit.
Trespass to try title Definition : an action brought as a means of obtaining redress for a trespass to real property and determining the title to the property Search Legal Dictionary ...
"To enable the (trespasser) to recover he must show an actual possession, an occupation exclusive, continuous, open or visible, and notorious for twenty years. It must not be equivocal, occasional or for a special or temporary purpose....
When a crime or trespass has been committed under aggravating circumstances, it is punished with more severity; and, the damages given to vindicate the wrong are greater.
If an easement does not already exist, the landowner may refuse to allow an easement to be established by keeping people off his property by trespass warnings and legal enforcement.
TOP License : A special permission to do something on, or with, somebody else's property which, were it not for the license, could be legally prevented or give rise to legal action in tort or trespass.
trespass to private land). Usually the claim will be for compensation. Claimant The name given to the person who brings a civil action. Code of Practice ...
Licence: Permission to do something on or with someone else's property which, if it were not for the licence, could be legally prevented or could give rise to an action in tort or trespass.
Trespass might also in certain cases be prevented by injunction. Under the Common Law Procedure Act of 18J4, and by other statutes in special cases, a limited power of injunction was conferred on the courts of common law.
When a man enters upon lands or into the house of another by authority of law, and afterwards abuses that authority, he becomes a trespasser ab initio. Bac. Ab. Trespass, B.; 8 Coke, 146 2 Bl. Rep. 1218 Clayt. 44.
Offenses considered misdemeanors will vary by state but may include vandalism, underage drinking, disorderly conduct, trespass, prostitution, public intoxication, and simple assault.
In pleading, a term for "action on the case", "trespass on the case", "special action of trespass on the case" --a common-law form of action. A remedy for all personal wrongs committed without force --where the injury is consequential.
The history of Anglo-American tort law can be traced back to the action for trespass to property or to the person. Not until the late 18th cent.
(3) Open and notorious, so as to put the true owner on notice that a trespasser is in possession. (4) Actual, so that the true owner has a cause of action for trespass, on which the true owner must act within the statute of limitations.
It also means illegal trespassing.This term is normally used in cases of patents and copyrights where intentionally or unintentionally someone have deemed invented or copied something which had already been patented or copyright respectively.
infringement n. 1) a trespassing or illegal entering. 2) in the law of patents... ingress 1) n. entrance. 2) n. the right to enter. 3) v. the act of enteri...
QUAE EST EADEM, pleading. Which is the same. 2. When the defendant in trespass justifies, that the trespass justified in the plea is the same as that complained... more ...
Tort: A civil wrong against someone, for example trespass, nuisance or negligence. 'Tort' is an old French word meaning 'wrong'. Trial: The formal investigation of a case in court (usually used in criminal cases).
Encroachment: Extending one's property onto that of another; a trespass, such as building a fence that intrudes upon or obstructs a public highway.
Liability could be placed on the people owning or controlling the premises even when the child was a trespasser who sneaked on the property.
No physical breaking and entering is required; the offender may simply trespass through an open door. Unlike robbery, which involves use of force or fear to obtain another person's property, there is usually no victim present during a burglary.
Examples of misdemeanors may include simple battery (hitting someone), traffic violations, thefts of property not exceeding a certain value (possibly $500), trespass, and disorderly conduct.
We look to the substantive law, for example, to tell us what constitutes a breach of contract, or medical malpractice, or trespass, or murder.
This principle of land ownership has been greatly tempered by case law which has limited ownership upwards to the extent necessary to maintain structures. Otherwise, airplanes would trespass incessantly.
Common law has been referred to as the "common sense of the community, crystallized and formulated by our ancestors". Trespass and Nuisance are dealt with by common law. It is under Common law that a right may be established based on use of a route.
See also: Law, Person, Property, Action, State
 
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