Dedimus potestatem
In law, dedimus potestatem (Latin for "we have given the power") is a writ whereby commission is given to one or more private persons for the expedition of some act normally performed by a judge. It is also called delegatio. It is granted most commonly upon the suggestion that a party, who is to do something before a judge or in a court, is too weak to travel. Its use is various, such as to take a personal answer to a bill in chancery, to examine witnesses, levy a fine, etc.
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
Dedimus potestatem
In law, dedimus potestatem (Latin for "we have given the power") is a writ whereby commission is given to one or more private persons for the expedition of some act normally performed by a judge. It is also called delegatio. It is granted most commonly upon the suggestion that a party, who is to do something before a judge or in a court, is too weak to travel. Its use is various, such as to take a personal answer to a bill in chancery, to examine witnesses, levy a fine, etc.
has abstract
In law, dedimus potestatem (La ...... e witnesses, levy a fine, etc.
@en
Unter der delegatio (lat. „Zah ...... Anweisung, bzw. Ermächtigung.
@de
Wikipage page ID
11,311,161
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
814,283,093
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
hypernym
comment
In law, dedimus potestatem (La ...... e witnesses, levy a fine, etc.
@en
Unter der delegatio (lat. „Zah ...... Anweisung, bzw. Ermächtigung.
@de
label
Dedimus potestatem
@en
Delegatio
@de