Utter (v) Utter means oral representation of facts in front of an authority who can record the speech for verification. Such statements are made on fact-finding process Legal-Explanations.com Home ...
COUNTERFEIT, UTTERING - Title 18, U.S.C., Sec. 472, makes it a Federal crime or offense for anyone to pass or 'utter,' with intent to defraud, any counterfeit United States Federal Reserve Note.
Utter: 1. Total; absolute; complete. 2. To say; to speak words. INDEX
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utter v. 1) to issue a forged document. 2) to speak. uxor n. Latin for "wife." In deeds and documents the term "et ux.
UTTER BARRISTER, English law, Those barristers who plead without the bar, and are distinguished from benchers, or those who have been readers and who are allowed to plead within the bar, as the king's counsel are. The same as ouster barrister.
Uttering Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ...
Rebutter Definition - Noun [Anglo-French reboter, from reboter to rebut] : the answer of a defendant in matter of fact to a plaintiff's surrejoinder ...
Act, utterance, writing, or illustration that is deemed deeply offensive according to contemporary community standards of morality and decency.
It is regrettable that Public Legal Education has fallen so far behind in this wonderful nation that self-seeking liars would be able to foist an utterly ridiculous concept on an uninformed public in an effort to cast a cloud of treason on lawyers ...
banks of issue had to begin the uphill course of a resumption of specie payments, the nation had to begin to feel the whole naked weight of the war debt, and the idea of the protectors of a high price of corn was proved by the event to be an utter ...
The United States has constitutional protection for freedom of speech, which is not interpreted to protect every utterance.
Such opinions, uttered "by the way", not upon the point or question pending, but as if turning aside for the time from the main topic to a collateral subject. Rohrback v. Germania Fire Ins. Co., 62 N.Y. 58 (1875), Folger, J.
The plaintiff is required to prove the colloquium (circumstances of utterance showing that the statement was directed against him or her specifically) and, when necessary, the innuendo (the factors making an apparently innocent statement defamatory).
An out-of-court statement by a party that, when uttered, is against the party's pecuniary, proprietary, ...
Amiodarone is widely prescribed to treat heart rhythm disorders such as atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter.
"Whoever, with the deliberate intention of wounding the religious feelings of any person, utters any word or makes any sound in the hearing of that person or makes any gesture in the sight of that person or places any object in the sight of that ...
consent when surrounding circumstances exist which would lead a reasonable person to believe that this consent had been given, although no direct, express or explicit words of agreement had been uttered. Examples: a) a "contract" based on the fact ...
In Massachusetts, these are: adultery, cruel and abusive treatment, utter desertion, long-term incarceration, gross and confirmed habits of intoxication, non-support, impotency, irretrievable breakdown of the marriage (no-fault) ...
There are law professors who are alleged to have gone an entire semester without uttering a declarative statement. Though the Socratic Method has passed out of vogue in the last decade, it remains a common instruction style in many law schools.
QUADRUPLICATION pleading. Formerly this word was used instead of surrebutter. 1 Bro. Civ. Law, 469, n.... more ...
Latin for "from the beginning." This term is used by lawyers intent upon getting their money's worth from a liberal arts education by uttering such statements as "The judge was against me ab initio." AB trust ...
Great care should be taken if it is intended to rely on words uttered in temper or when interpreting an employee's contract as implied resignation.
Statement - A writing made by a person and signed or otherwise adopted or approved by such person; any mechanical, electrical or other recording or a transcription thereof, which is a recital of an oral utterance; ...
See also: Will, Were, Person, Law, State
 
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