juristic

ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to law or to legal rights and obligations
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How To Use juristic In A Sentence

  • In the present state of juristic opinion, I would not extend the doctrine of stare decisis any further.
  • In principle, hereditary succession is rejected by the juristic tradition.
  • Aquinas, protest against juristical doctrine of law being the pleasure of the prince, ii. Rousseau (Volume 1 and 2)
  • In 1905 the islands were ‘incorporated’ into the Japanese Empire, when the Governor of Shimane prefecture stated that the islands were under the juristiction of the Shimane prefectural government.
  • The title possesses a juristic interest: the official bodies are called commissioni, not tribunali; decretare, and not giudicare or decidere, is used; and the processes are termed controversie and contestazioni. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
  • Such duplication could cause juristic confusion and undermine the very values intended to be protected.
  • Fourth, the idea of patristic authority (auctoritas patrum or auctoritas sanctorum) juxtaposed the notion of authorization (the inspiration of the Fathers by Holy Scripture), the notion of persuasion apart from or prior to rational demonstration, the notion of personal expertise in the juristic formulation of a canonical faith, and the anthropological reverence for the elders (auctoritas maiorum as the respect due the fathers of a Christian doctrinal tradition). AUTHORITY
  • In order for a finding of unjust enrichment, there must be a finding that the respondent was enriched to the applicant's detriment and there was no juristic reason for the enrichment.
  • There are, we think, four or perhaps five distinct juristic grounds for finding that a guarantor is released or discharged by virtue of the failure of another guarantor to become liable.
  • The juristic theory of the state that generated this image was fiercely opposed by pragmatists and pluralists.
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