| slovo | definícia |  
bona fide (encz) | bona fide,důvěryhodný			 |  
bona fide (encz) | bona fide,v dobrém úmyslu			 |  
Bona fide (gcide) | Bona fide \Bo"na fi"de\ [L.]
    In or with good faith; without fraud or deceit; real or
    really; actual or actually; genuine or genuinely; as, you
    must proceed bona fide; a bona fide purchaser or transaction.
    [1913 Webster] |  
bona fide (wn) | bona fide
     adj 1: undertaken in good faith; "a bona fide offer"
     2: not counterfeit or copied; "an authentic signature"; "a bona
        fide manuscript"; "an unquestionable antique"; "photographs
        taken in a veritable bull ring" [syn: authentic, {bona
        fide}, unquestionable, veritable] |  
BONA FIDE (bouvier) | BONA FIDE. In or with good faith. 
      2. The law requires all persons in their transactions to act with good 
 faith and a contract where the parties have not acted bona fide is void at 
 the pleasure of the innocent party. 8 John. R. 446; 12 John. R. 320; 2 John. 
 Ch. R. 35. If a contract be made with good faith, subsequent fraudulent acts 
 will not vitiate it; although such acts may raise a presumption of 
 antecedent fraud, and thus become a means of proving the want of good faith 
 in making the contract. 2 Miles' Rep. 229; and see also, Rob. Fraud. Conv. 
 33, 34; Inst. 2, 6 Dig. 41, 3, 10 and 44; Id. 41, 1, 48; Code, 7, 31; 9 Co. 
 11; Wingate's Maxims, max. 37; Lane, 47; Plowd. 473; 9 Pick. R. 265; 12 
 Pick. R. 545; 8 Conn. R. 336; 10 Conn. R. 30; 3 Watts, R. 25; 5 Wend. R. 20, 
 566. In the civil law these actions are called (actiones) bonae fidei, in 
 which the judge has a. more unrestrained power (liberior potestas) of 
 estimating how much one person ought to give to or do, for another; whereas, 
 those actions are said to be stricti juris, in which the power of the judge 
 is confined to the agreement of the parties. Examples of the foraier are the 
 actions empti-venditi, locati-conducti, negitiorum gestorum, &c.; of the 
 latter, the actions ex mutus, ex chirographo, ex stipilatu, ex indebito, 
 actions proescriptis verbis, &c. 
 
  |  
  | | podobné slovo | definícia |  
bona fides (encz) | bona fides,bezelstnost			bona fides,dobrý úmysl			bona fides,pravdivost			bona fides,upřímnost			 |  
Bona fide (gcide) | Bona fide \Bo"na fi"de\ [L.]
    In or with good faith; without fraud or deceit; real or
    really; actual or actually; genuine or genuinely; as, you
    must proceed bona fide; a bona fide purchaser or transaction.
    [1913 Webster] |  
Bona fides (gcide) | Bona fides \Bo"na fi"des\ (b[=o]"n[.a] f[imac]"d[=e]z). [L.]
    Good faith; honesty; freedom from fraud or deception.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl.] |  
BONA FIDE (bouvier) | BONA FIDE. In or with good faith. 
      2. The law requires all persons in their transactions to act with good 
 faith and a contract where the parties have not acted bona fide is void at 
 the pleasure of the innocent party. 8 John. R. 446; 12 John. R. 320; 2 John. 
 Ch. R. 35. If a contract be made with good faith, subsequent fraudulent acts 
 will not vitiate it; although such acts may raise a presumption of 
 antecedent fraud, and thus become a means of proving the want of good faith 
 in making the contract. 2 Miles' Rep. 229; and see also, Rob. Fraud. Conv. 
 33, 34; Inst. 2, 6 Dig. 41, 3, 10 and 44; Id. 41, 1, 48; Code, 7, 31; 9 Co. 
 11; Wingate's Maxims, max. 37; Lane, 47; Plowd. 473; 9 Pick. R. 265; 12 
 Pick. R. 545; 8 Conn. R. 336; 10 Conn. R. 30; 3 Watts, R. 25; 5 Wend. R. 20, 
 566. In the civil law these actions are called (actiones) bonae fidei, in 
 which the judge has a. more unrestrained power (liberior potestas) of 
 estimating how much one person ought to give to or do, for another; whereas, 
 those actions are said to be stricti juris, in which the power of the judge 
 is confined to the agreement of the parties. Examples of the foraier are the 
 actions empti-venditi, locati-conducti, negitiorum gestorum, &c.; of the 
 latter, the actions ex mutus, ex chirographo, ex stipilatu, ex indebito, 
 actions proescriptis verbis, &c. 
 
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