Legal Maxims 2
Legal Maxims 2
Legal Maxims 2
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2. Actionable per se – The very act is punishable, and no proof of damage is required.
3. Actio personalis moritur cum persona – A personal right of action dies with the
5. Actus me invito factus non est mens actus – An act done by me against my will is not
6. Actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea – An act does not make one guilty unless it is
8. Actus Reus Non Facit Reum Nisi Mens Sit Rea – Conviction of a crime requires proof
of a criminal act and intent. Or an act does not make a defendant guilty without a guilty
mind. Or an act does not constitute guilt unless done with a guilty intention.
11. Amicus Curiae – A friend of court or member of the Bar who is appointed to assist the
court.
12. Ante Litem Motam – Before suit brought; before controversy instituted, or spoken
17. Boni judicis est ampliare jurisdictionem – It is the part of a good judge to enlarge his
18. Caveat – A caution registered with the public court to indicate to the officials that they
are not to act in the matter mentioned in the caveat without first giving notice to the
caveator.
23. Communis hostis omnium – They are common enemies of all. The common enemy of
25. Corpus delicti – The facts and circumstances constituting a crime and Concrete
Also, it refers to the principle that ‘a crime must be proved to have occurred before a person
can be convicted of committing that crime.’ (This definition is mostly used in Western Law.)
26. Crimen trahit personam – The crime carries the person. Read with section 2 of IPC. In
other words, it means wherever a person goes, and if he commits a crime there, then he will
be covered by the provisions of the Indian Penal Code, that is, Interterritorial Jurisdiction.
law is not concerned with small or insignificant things/matters. Read with section 95 of IPC.
Or A common law principle whereby judges will not sit in judgment of extremely minor
33. Dictum – Statement of law made by the judge in the course of the decision but not
34. Doli capax – Capable of forming necessary intent to commit a crime. Read with section
83 of IPC.
35. Doli incapax – Incapable of crime. Or incapable of forming the intent to commit a crime.
36. Detinue – Tort of wrongfully holding goods that belong to someone else.
37. Donatio mortis causa – Gift because of death. Or a future gift given in expectation of
the donor’s imminent death and only delivered upon the donor’s death.
According to Wikipedia, It is a law that retroactively changes the legal consequences (or
status) of actions that were committed or relationships that existed before the enactment of
the law. In criminal law, it may criminalise actions that were legal when committed; it may
aggravate a crime by bringing it into a more severe category than it was in when it was
penalties or extending sentences; or it may alter the rules of evidence in order to make
conviction for a crime likelier than it would have been when the deed was committed.
47. Furiosi nulla voluntas est – Mentally impaired or mentally incapable persons cannot
validly sign a will, contract, or form the frame of mind necessary to commit a crime. Or a
48. Furious absentis loco est – A madman is like one who is absent. Read with section 84
of IPC.
49. Furiosis furore suo puiner -A madman is best punished by his own madness.
51. Habeas corpus – A writ to have the body of a person to be brought in before the judge.
excuse, but ignorance of the law is no excuse. Read with sections 76 and 79 of IPC.
53. Ignorantia juris non excusat – Ignorance of law is not an excuse. Or ignorance of the
law excuses no one. In other words, a person who is unaware of a law may not escape
liability for violating that law merely because one was unaware of its content.
59. Innuendo – Spoken words that are defamatory because they have a double meaning.
62. Inter vivos – Between living people (especially of a gift as opposed to a legacy).
63. Interest Reipublicae Ut Sit Finis Litium – It means it is in the interest of the state that
66. Jus in rem – Right against the world at large. Related: What Is Right in Rem and Right
in Personam?
67. Jus naturale – Natural law. Or in other words, a system of law based on fundamental
68. Jus Necessitatis – It means a person’s right to do what is required for which no threat
Dissuasion means the action or process of trying to persuade someone not to take a
Question asked by a law student: I have a doubt about the maxim jus necessitatis. Does it
Answer: This is called the doctrine of necessity. It means a person doing a thing under
compulsion of a situation. It is not considered a wrongful act. It comes under the ambit
of section 81 of IPC.
75. Lex non a rege est violanda – The law must not be violated even by the king.
76. Locus standi – Right of a party to an action to appear and be heard by the court.
78. Malum in se or Mala in se (plural) – Wrong or evil in itself. Or Mala in se is ‘a term that
signifies crime that is considered wrong in and of itself.’ For example, most human beings
believe that murder, rape, and theft are wrong, regardless of whether a law governs such
conduct or where the conduct occurs and is thus recognisably malum in se.
79. Malum prohibitum – In a way, opposite of Malum in se. It means ‘crimes are criminal
not because they are inherently bad, but because the act is prohibited by the law of the
state.’ For example, jurisdiction in India requires drivers to drive on the left side of the road.
This is not because driving on the right side of a road is considered immoral, but because
the law says to drive on the left side and not on the right side.
government and public authority to compel the performance of public duty. Related: 5 Types
of Writs.
85. Mutatis Mutandis – With the necessary changes having been made. Or with the
86. Nemo bis punitur pro eodem delicto – Nobody can be twice punished for the same
offence.
87. Nemo debet bis vexari pro una et eadem causa – It means no man shall be punished
89. Nemo moriturus praesumitur mentire – A man will not meet his maker (God) with a
lie in his mouth. Or, in other words, ‘no man at the point of death is presumed to lie.’ This
90. Nemo Potest esse tenens et dominus – Nobody can be both a landlord and a tenant
part of a suit.
92. Novation – Transaction in which a new contract is agreed by all parties to replace an
existing contract.
93. Nullum crimen sine lege, nulla poena sine lege – There must be no crime or
punishment except in accordance with fixed, predetermined law. In other words, there must
94. Nunc pro tunc – Now for then. A ruling nunc pro tunc applies retroactively to correct an
earlier ruling.
95. Non Sequitur – A statement (such as a response) that does not follow logically from or
96. Obiter dictum – Things said by the way. It is generally used in law to refer to an opinion
In other words, Obiter dictum means “that which is said in passing,” an incidental statement.
Specifically, in law, it refers to a passage in a judicial opinion that is not necessary for the
decision of the case before the court. Such statements lack the force of precedent but may
nevertheless be significant.
Source: Britannica
98. Pacta Sunt Servanda – Agreements must be kept. Or Agreements are legally binding.
In international agreements it means ‘every treaty in force is binding upon the parties to it
99. Pari passu – With an equal step. Read more about it on Wikipedia.
101. Per curiam (decision or opinion) – By the court. In other words, the decision is made
Also, in diplomacy, a persona non grata is a foreign person whose entering or remaining in
105. Alimony – A husband’s (or wife’s) provision for a spouse after separation or
106. Palimony – Money which a man pays to a woman with whom he has been living and
jurisdictions.
109. Quantum meruit – What one has earned. Or the amount he deserves.
In other words, A reasonable sum of money to be paid for services rendered or work done
when the amount due is not stipulated (specified, written down) in a legally enforceable
contract.
Source: Oxford
110. Qui facit per alium, facit per se – He who acts through another acts himself.
In simple words, It is a fundamental legal maxim of the law of agency. It is a maxim often
stated in discussing the liability of the employer for the act of employee in terms of vicarious
111. Qui peccat ebrius luat sobrius – He who does wrong when drunk must be punished
113. Qui sentit commodum, sentire debet et onus – It means he who receives
114. Quo warranto – By what authority. A writ calling upon one to show under what
115. Quod necessitas non habet legem or Necessitas non habet legem – Necessity
117. Respondeat superior – Let the master answer. For example, there are circumstances
when an employer is liable for acts of employees performed within the course of their
Or let the principal answer. In other words, it means to hold the employer or the principal
legally responsible for the wrongful acts of an employee or agent committed within the
118. Res ipsa loquitor – The thing speaks for itself. Related: What Is Res Ipsa Loquitor
120. Res Judicata Pro Veritate Accipitur – It means that a judicial decision must be
accepted as correct.
122. Salus populi est suprema lex – The welfare of the people is the supreme law.
128. Ubi jus ibi remedium – Where there is a right, there is a remedy.
129. Veto – Ban or order not to allow something to become law, even if it has been passed
by a parliament.
132. Volenti non fit injuria – Damage suffered by consent gives no cause of action. Or
harm caused with consent cannot be considered an injury. Read with section 87 of IPC.
In other words, If someone willingly places himself in a position where he knows that harm
might result, then he is not able (allowed) to bring a claim against the other party in tort or
133. Vox populi – Voice of the people. Or the opinion of the majority of the people.
134. Waiver – Voluntarily giving up or removing the conditions.