slovo | definícia |
admission (mass) | admission
- prístup, priznanie, vstupné |
admission (encz) | admission,doznání n: Zdeněk Brož |
admission (encz) | admission,přijetí n: Zdeněk Brož |
admission (encz) | admission,přijmout v: [obec.] be ~ted to a school, into membership = být
přijat do školy, za člena mamm |
admission (encz) | admission,přístup n: [obec.] ~ is free = vstup |
admission (encz) | admission,přiznání |
Admission (gcide) | Admission \Ad*mis"sion\, n. [L. admissio: cf. F. admission. See
Admit.]
1. The act or practice of admitting.
[1913 Webster]
2. Power or permission to enter; admittance; entrance;
access; power to approach.
[1913 Webster]
What numbers groan for sad admission there! --Young.
[1913 Webster]
3. The granting of an argument or position not fully proved;
the act of acknowledging something ?serted;
acknowledgment; concession.
[1913 Webster]
The too easy admission of doctrines. --Macaulay.
[1913 Webster]
4. (Law) Acquiescence or concurrence in a statement made by
another, and distinguishable from a confession in that an
admission presupposes prior inquiry by another, but a
confession may be made without such inquiry.
[1913 Webster]
5. A fact, point, or statement admitted; as, admission made
out of court are received in evidence.
[1913 Webster]
6. (Eng. Eccl. Law) Declaration of the bishop that he
approves of the presentee as a fit person to serve the
cure of the church to which he is presented. --Shipley.
[1913 Webster]
Syn: Admittance; concession; acknowledgment; concurrence;
allowance. See Admittance.
[1913 Webster] |
admission (wn) | admission
n 1: the act of admitting someone to enter; "the surgery was
performed on his second admission to the clinic" [syn:
admission, admittance]
2: an acknowledgment of the truth of something
3: the fee charged for admission [syn: entrance fee,
admission, admission charge, admission fee, {admission
price}, price of admission, entrance money]
4: the right to enter [syn: entree, access, accession,
admission, admittance] |
ADMISSION (bouvier) | ADMISSION, in corporations or companies. The act of the corporation or
company by which an individual acquires the rights of a member of such
corporation or company.
2. In trading and joint stock corporations no vote of admission is
requisite; for any person who owns stock therein, either by original
subscription or by conveyance, is in general entitled to, and cannot be
refused, the rights and privileges of a member. 3 Mass. R. 364; Doug. 524; 1
Man. & Ry. 529.
3. All that can be required of the person demanding a transfer on the
books, is to prove to the corporation his right to the property. See 8 Pick.
90.
4. In a Mutual Insurance Company, it has been held, that a person may
become a member by insuring his property, paying the premium and deposit-
money, and rendering himself liable to be assessed according to the rules of
the corporation. 2 Mass. R. 315.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
admission /entrance/ charge (encz) | admission /entrance/ charge,vstupní poplatek [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
admission charge (encz) | admission charge,vstupné n: Pino |
admission fee (encz) | admission fee,vstupné n: Pino |
admissions (encz) | admissions,přístupy n: pl. Zdeněk Brožadmissions,přiznání pl. Zdeněk Brož |
drainage system admission (encz) | drainage system admission,zaústění odvodňovací soustavy [eko.] RNDr.
Pavel Piskač |
judicial admission (encz) | judicial admission, n: |
price of admission (encz) | price of admission, n: |
readmission (encz) | readmission,opětovné přijetí n: Zdeněk Brožreadmission,opětovné připuštění n: Zdeněk Brožreadmission,znovupřijetí n: Zdeněk Brož |
Admission (gcide) | Admission \Ad*mis"sion\, n. [L. admissio: cf. F. admission. See
Admit.]
1. The act or practice of admitting.
[1913 Webster]
2. Power or permission to enter; admittance; entrance;
access; power to approach.
[1913 Webster]
What numbers groan for sad admission there! --Young.
[1913 Webster]
3. The granting of an argument or position not fully proved;
the act of acknowledging something ?serted;
acknowledgment; concession.
[1913 Webster]
The too easy admission of doctrines. --Macaulay.
[1913 Webster]
4. (Law) Acquiescence or concurrence in a statement made by
another, and distinguishable from a confession in that an
admission presupposes prior inquiry by another, but a
confession may be made without such inquiry.
[1913 Webster]
5. A fact, point, or statement admitted; as, admission made
out of court are received in evidence.
[1913 Webster]
6. (Eng. Eccl. Law) Declaration of the bishop that he
approves of the presentee as a fit person to serve the
cure of the church to which he is presented. --Shipley.
[1913 Webster]
Syn: Admittance; concession; acknowledgment; concurrence;
allowance. See Admittance.
[1913 Webster] |
Nonadmission (gcide) | Nonadmission \Non`ad*mis"sion\, n.
Failure to be admitted.
[1913 Webster] nonadsorbent |
Preadmission (gcide) | Preadmission \Pre`ad*mis"sion\, n.
Lit., previous admission; specif. (Engin.), admission, as of
steam, to the engine cylinder before the back stroke is
completed, thus increasing the cushioning.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.] |
Readmission (gcide) | Readmission \Re`ad*mis"sion\ (r[=e]`[a^]d*m[i^]sh"[u^]n), n.
The act of admitting again, or the state of being readmitted;
as, the readmission of fresh air into an exhausted receiver;
the readmission of a student into a seminary.
[1913 Webster] |
admission charge (wn) | admission charge
n 1: the fee charged for admission [syn: entrance fee,
admission, admission charge, admission fee,
admission price, price of admission, entrance money] |
admission day (wn) | Admission Day
n 1: in some states of the United States: a legal holiday
commemorating the day the state was admitted to the Union |
admission fee (wn) | admission fee
n 1: the fee charged for admission [syn: entrance fee,
admission, admission charge, admission fee,
admission price, price of admission, entrance money] |
admission price (wn) | admission price
n 1: the fee charged for admission [syn: entrance fee,
admission, admission charge, admission fee,
admission price, price of admission, entrance money] |
judicial admission (wn) | judicial admission
n 1: (law) an agreement or concession made by parties in a
judicial proceeding (or by their attorneys) relating to the
business before the court; must be in writing unless they
are part of the court record; "a stipulation of fact was
made in order to avoid delay" [syn: stipulation,
judicial admission] |
price of admission (wn) | price of admission
n 1: the fee charged for admission [syn: entrance fee,
admission, admission charge, admission fee,
admission price, price of admission, entrance money] |
readmission (wn) | readmission
n 1: the act of admitting someone again; "the surgery was
performed on his readmission to the clinic" |
ADMISSION (bouvier) | ADMISSION, in corporations or companies. The act of the corporation or
company by which an individual acquires the rights of a member of such
corporation or company.
2. In trading and joint stock corporations no vote of admission is
requisite; for any person who owns stock therein, either by original
subscription or by conveyance, is in general entitled to, and cannot be
refused, the rights and privileges of a member. 3 Mass. R. 364; Doug. 524; 1
Man. & Ry. 529.
3. All that can be required of the person demanding a transfer on the
books, is to prove to the corporation his right to the property. See 8 Pick.
90.
4. In a Mutual Insurance Company, it has been held, that a person may
become a member by insuring his property, paying the premium and deposit-
money, and rendering himself liable to be assessed according to the rules of
the corporation. 2 Mass. R. 315.
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ADMISSIONS (bouvier) | ADMISSIONS, in evidence. Concessions by a party of the existence of certain
facts. The term admission is usually applied to civil transactions, and to
matters of fact in criminal cases, where there is no criminal intent the
term confession, (q.v.) is generally considered as an admission of guilt.
2. An admission is the testimony which the party admitting bears to the
truth of a fact against himself. It is a voluntary act,which he acknowledges
as true the fact in dispute. [An admission and consent are, in fact, one and
the same thing, unless indeed for more exactness we say, that consent is
given to a present fact or agreement, and admission has reference to au
agreement or a fact anterior for properly speaking, it is not the admission
which forms a contract, obligation or engagement, against the party
admitting. The admission is, by its nature, only the proof of a pre-existing
obligation, resulting from the agreement or the fact, the truth of which is
acknowledged. There is still another remarkable difference between
admission and consent: the first is always free in its origin, the latter,
always morally forced. I may refuse to consent to a proposition made to me,
abstain from a fact or an action which would subject me to an obligation ;
but once my consent is given, or the action committed, I am no longer at
liberty to deny or refuse either; I am constrained to admit, under the
penalty of dishonor and infamy. But notwithstanding all these differences,
admission is identified with consent, and they are both the manifestation of
the will. These admissions are generally evidence of those facts, when the
admissions themselves are proved.]
3. The admissibility and effect of evidence of this description will be
considered generally, with respect to the nature and manner, of the
admission itself and, secondly, with respect to the parties to be affected
by it.
4. In the first place, as to the nature and manner of the admission; it
is either made with a view to evidence; or, with a view to induce others to
act upon the representation; or, it is an unconnected or casual
representation.
5.-1. As an instance of admission made with a view to evidence may be
mentioned the case where a party has solemnly admitted a fact under his hand
and seal, in which case he is, estopped, not only from disputing the deed
itself, but every fact which it recites. B. N. P. 298; 1 Salk. 186; Com.
Dig. Estoppel, B 5; Stark. Ev. pt. 4, p. 3 1.
6.-2. Instances of thing second class of admissions which have
induced others to act upon them are those where a man has cohabited with a
woman, and treated her in the front of the world as his wife, 2 Esp. 637; or
where he has held himself out to the world in a particular character; Ib. 1
Camp. 245 ; he cannot in the one case deny her to be his Wife when sued by a
creditor who has supplied her with goods as such, nor in the other can he
divest himself of the character be has assumed.
7.-3. Where the admission or declaration is not direct to the
question pending, although admissible, it is not in general conclusive
evidence; and though a party may by falsifying his former declaration, show
that he has acted illegally and immorally, yet if he is not guilty of any
breach of good faith in the existing transaction, and has not induced
others, to act upon his admission or declaration, nor derived any benefit
from it against his adversary, be is not bound by it. The evidence in such
cases is merely presumptive, and liable to be rebutted.
8. Secondly, with respect to the parties to be affected by it. 1. By a
party to a suit, 1 Phil. Ev. 74; 7 T. R. 563; 1 Dall. 65. The admissions of
the party really interested, although he is no party to the suit, are
evidence. 1 Wils. 257.
9.-2. The admissions of a partner during the existence of a
partnership, are evidence against both. 1 Taunt. 104; Peake's C. 203 1
Stark. C. 81. See 10 Johns. R. 66 Ib. 216; 1 M. & Selw. 249. As to
admissions made after the dissolution. of the partnership, see 3 Johns. R.
536; 15 Johns. R. 424 1 Marsh. (Kentucky) R. 189. According to the English
decisions, it seems, the admissions of one partner, after the dissolution,
have been holden to bind the other partner; this rule has been partially
changed by act of parliament. Colly. on Part. 282; Stat. 9 Geo. IV. c. 14,
(May 9, 1828.) In the Supreme Court of the United States, a rule, the
reverse of the English, has been adopted, mainly on the ground, that the
admission is a new contract or promise, springing out of, and supported by
the original consideration. 1 Pet. R. 351; 2 M'Lean, 87. The state courts
have varied in their decisions some have adopted the English rule; and, in
others it has been overruled. 2 Bouv. Inst. ii. 1517; Story, Partn. Sec.
324; 3 Kent, Com. Lect. 43, p. 49, 4th ed.; 17 S. & R. 126; 15 Johns. R.
409; 9 Cowen, R. 422; 4 Paige, R. 17; 11 Pick. R. 400; 7 Yerg. R. 534.
10.-3. By one of several persons who have a community of interest.
Stark, Ev. pt. 4, p. 47; 3 Serg. & R. 9.
11.-4. By an agent, 1 Phil. Ev. 77-82 3 Paley Ag. 203-207.
12.-5. By an attorney, 4 Camp. 133; by wife, Paley, Ag. 139, n. 2
Whart.Dig. tit. Evidence, 0 7 T. R. 112 ; Nott & M'C. 374.
13. Admissions are express or implied. An express admission is one made
in direct terms. An admission may be implied from the silence of the party,
and may be presumed. As for instance, when the existence of the debt, or of
the particular right, has been asserted in his presence, and he has not
contradicted it. And an acquiescence and endurance, when acts are done by
another, which if wrongfully done, are encroachments, and call for
resistance and opposition, are evidence, as a tacit admission that such acts
could not be legally resisted. See 2 Stark. C. 471. See, generally, Stark.
Ev. part 4, tit. Admissions; 1 Phil. Ev. part 1, c. 5, s. 4; 1 Greenl. Ev.
Sec. 169-212; 2 Evans' Pothier, 319; 8 East, 549, ii. 1; Com. Dig.
Testemoigne, Addenda, vol. 7, p. 434; Vin. Abr. Evidence, A, b. 2, A, b. 23
Ib. Confessions; this Dict. tit. Confessions, Examination; Bac. Abr.
Evidence L.; Toullier, Droit, Civil Francais, tome 10, p. 375, 450; 3 Bouv.
Inst. n. 3073.
ADMISSIONS. in pleading. Where one party means to take advantage of, or rely
upon some matter alleged by his adversary, and to make it part of his case,
he ought to admit such matter in his own pleadings; as if either party
states the title under which his adversary claims, in which instances it,is
directly opposite in its nature to a protestation. See Prote stando. But
where the party wishes to prevent the application of his pleading to some
matter contained in the pleading of his adversary, and therefore makes an
express admission of such matter (which is sometimes the case,) in order to
exclude it from the issue taken or the like, it is somewhat similar in
operation and effect, to a protestation.
2. The usual mode of making an express admission in pleading, is, after
saying that the plaintiff ought not to have or maintain his action, &c., to
proceed thus, "Because he says that although it be true that" &c. repeating
such of the allegations of the adverse party as are meant to be admitted.
Express admissions are only matters of fact alleged in the pleadings; it
never being necessary expressly to admit their legal sufficiency, which is
always taken for granted, unless some objection be made to them. Lawes' Civ.
Pl. 143, 144. See 1 Chit Pl. 600; Archb. Civ. Pl. 215.
3. In chancery pleadings, admissions are said to be plenary and
partial. They are plenary by force of terms not only when the answer runs
in this form, "the defendant admits it to be true," but also when he simply
asserts, and generally speaking, when be says, that "he has been informed,
and believes it to be true," without adding a qualification such as, "that
he does not know it of his own knowledge to be so, and therefore does not
admit the same." Partial admissions are those which are delivered in terms
of uncertainty, mixed up as they frequently are, with explanatory or
qualifying circumstances.
ADMISSIONS, of attorneys and counselors. To entitle counselors and
attorneys to practice in court, they must be admitted by the court to
practice there. Different statutes and rules have been made to regulate
their admission; they generally require a previous qualification by study
under the direction of some practicing counsellor or attorney. See 1 Troub.
& Haly's Pr. 18; 1 Arch. Pr. 16; Blake's Pr. 30.
ADMISSIONS, in practice, It, frequently occurs in practice, that in order to
save expenses as to mere formal proofs, the attorneys on each side consent
to admit, reciprocally, certain facts in the cause without calling for proof
of them.
2. These are usually reduced to writing, and the, attorneys shortly,
add to this effect, namely, "We agree that the above facts shall on the
trial of this cause be admitted, and taken as proved on each side;" and
signing two copies now called, "admissions" in the cause, each attorney
takes one. Gresl. Eq. Ev. c. 2, p. 38.
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JUDICIAL ADMISSION (bouvier) | JUDICIAL ADMISSIONS. Those which are generally made in writing in court by
the attorney of the party; they appear upon the record, as in the pleadings
and the like.
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