ademptio

ademptio
Same as ademption.

Ballentine's law dictionary. . 1998.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • ademptio — /aedem(p)sh(iy)ow/ Lat. In the civil law, a revocation of a legacy; an ademption. Where it was expressly transferred from one person to another, it was called translatio …   Black's law dictionary

  • ademptio — /aedem(p)sh(iy)ow/ Lat. In the civil law, a revocation of a legacy; an ademption. Where it was expressly transferred from one person to another, it was called translatio …   Black's law dictionary

  • ademption — ⇒ADEMPTION, subst. fém. DR. ANC. ,,Révocation d un legs, d une donation. (LITTRÉ). Rem. 1. Noté comme ,,peu usité par Ac. 1835, Ac. 1878, Ac. t. 1 1932 et vieilli par DG. 2. Lar. 19e, Lar. 20e et Lar. encyclop. sont les seuls à donner un autre… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • adempţiune — ADEMPŢIÚNE s.f. (Rar) Luare în posesiune sau acceptare a unui beneficiu. [pr.: ţi u ] – Din fr. ademption, lat. ademptio. Trimis de ana zecheru, 13.09.2007. Sursa: DEX 98  adempţiúne s. f. (sil. demp ţi u ), g. d. art. adempţiúnii; pl.… …   Dicționar Român

  • Ademption — A*demp tion ([.a]*d[e^]mp sh[u^]n), n. [L. ademptio, fr. adimere, ademptum, to take away; ad + emere to buy, orig. to take.] (Law) The revocation or taking away of a grant, donation, legacy, or the like. Bouvier. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Roman censor — A Censor was a magistrate of high rank in the ancient Roman Republic. This position (called censura) was responsible for maintaining the census, supervising public morality, and overseeing certain aspects of the government s finances.The censors… …   Wikipedia

  • ademption — /euh demp sheuhn/, n. Law. the failure of a legacy because the subject matter no longer belongs to the testator s estate at death. [1580 90; < L ademption (s. of ademptio) a taking away, equiv. to adempt(us) (ad AD + em(p) , s. of emere to take + …   Universalium

  • ademption — ademp·tion /ə demp shən/ n [Latin ademptio, from adimere to take away, from ad to + emere to buy, obtain] 1: the revocation of a gift in a will inferred from the disposal (as by sale) of the property by the maker of the will before he or she dies …   Law dictionary

  • Ademtion — Adem|ti|on, die; , en [lat. ademptio] (veraltet): Wegnahme, Entziehung …   Universal-Lexikon

  • ademption — (a dan psion) s. f. Terme de jurisprudence. Révocation d un legs, d une donation. ÉTYMOLOGIE    Ademptio, de ad, à, et emere, prendre …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

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