| slovo | definícia |  
Approvement (gcide) | Approvement \Ap*prove"ment\, n. [Obs.]
    1. Approbation.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             I did nothing without your approvement. --Hayward.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    2. (Eng. Law) a confession of guilt by a prisoner charged
       with treason or felony, together with an accusation of his
       accomplish and a giving evidence against them in order to
       obtain his own pardon. The term is no longer in use; it
       corresponded to what is now known as turning king's (or
       queen's) evidence in England, and state's evidence in the
       United States. --Burrill. Bouvier.
       [1913 Webster] |  
Approvement (gcide) | Approvement \Ap*prove"ment\, n. (Old Eng. Law)
    Improvement of common lands, by inclosing and converting them
    to the uses of husbandry for the advantage of the lord of the
    manor. --Blackstone.
    [1913 Webster] |  
APPROVEMENT (bouvier) | APPROVEMENT, English crim. law. The act by which a person indicted of
 treason or felony, and arraigned for the same, confesses the same before any
 plea pleaded, and accuses others, his accomplices, of the same crime, in
 order to obtain his pardon. 2 This practice is disused. 4 Bl. Com. 330 1
 Phil. Ev. 37. In modern practice, an accomplice is permitted to give
 evidence against his associates. 9 Cowen, R. 707; 2 Virg. Cas. 490; 4 Mass.
 R. 156; 12 Mass. R. 20; 4 Wash. C. C. R. 428; 1 Dev. R. 363; 1 City Hall
 Rec. 8. In Vermont, on a trial for adultery, it was held that a particeps
 criminis was not a competent witness, because no person can be allowed to
 testify his own guilt or turpitude to convict another. N. Chap. R. 9.
 
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APPROVEMENT (bouvier) | APPROVEMENT, English law. 1. The inclosing of common land within the lord's
 waste, so as to leave egress and regress to a tenant who is a commoner. 2.
 The augmentation of the profits of land. Stat. of Merton, 20 Hen. VIII.; F.
 N. B. 72 Crompt. Jus. 250; 1 Lilly's Reg. 110.
 
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  | | podobné slovo | definícia |  
Approvement (gcide) | Approvement \Ap*prove"ment\, n. [Obs.]
    1. Approbation.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             I did nothing without your approvement. --Hayward.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    2. (Eng. Law) a confession of guilt by a prisoner charged
       with treason or felony, together with an accusation of his
       accomplish and a giving evidence against them in order to
       obtain his own pardon. The term is no longer in use; it
       corresponded to what is now known as turning king's (or
       queen's) evidence in England, and state's evidence in the
       United States. --Burrill. Bouvier.
       [1913 Webster]Approvement \Ap*prove"ment\, n. (Old Eng. Law)
    Improvement of common lands, by inclosing and converting them
    to the uses of husbandry for the advantage of the lord of the
    manor. --Blackstone.
    [1913 Webster] |  
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