Maxim 2133 Maxim

nemo, max, nihil, co, tenetur, bound and broom

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Nemo prcesumitur malus. No one is presumed to be bad. • Nemo prohibetur pluses negotiations sive artes exercere. No one is restrained from exercising sev eral kinds of business or arts. 11 Co. 64.

Nemo prohibetur pluribus defensionibua uti. No one is forbidden to set up several defenses. Co. Litt. 304 ; Wing. Max. 479.

Nemo prudens punit ut prceterite revocentur, sed ut future prwveniantur. No wise man punishes that things done may be revoked, but that future wrongs may he prevented. 3 Bulstr. 17.

Nemo punitur pro alieno delicto. No one is to be punished for the crime or wrong of another. Co. Litt. 145 b ; Wing. Max. 336.

Nemo punitur sine injuria, facto, seu defalto. No one is punished unless for some wrong, act, or default. 2 Inst. 287.

Nemo qui condemnare potest, absolvere non po test. No one who may condeffin is unable to acquit. Dig. 50. 17. 37.

Nemo sibi esse judex vel suis jos dicere debet. No man ought to be his own judge, or to admin ister justice in cases where his relations are con cerned. 12 Co. 113; Cod. 3. 5. 1; Broom, Max. 116, 124.

Nemo sine actione expositor, et hoc non sine breve sive libello conventional(. No one goes to law without an action, and no one can bring an action without a writ or bill. Bract. 112.

Nemo tenetur ad impossibile. No one is bound to an impossibility. Jenk. Cent. 7 ; Broom, Max. 244. Nemo tenetur armare adversarium contra se. No one is bound to arm his adversary against himself. Wing. Max. 665.

Nemo tenetur divinare. No one Is bound to fore tell. 4 Co. 28 ; 10 id. 55 a.

Nemo tenetur edere instrumento contra se. No man Is hound to produce writings against himself. Bell, Dist.

Nemo tenetur informare qui nescit sed quisquis scirc quad in format. No one who is ignorant of a thing is bound to give information of it, but every one is hound to know that which he gives informa tion of. Branch, Prins. ; Lane 110.

Nemo jurare in suam turpitudinem. No one is bound to testify to his own baseness.

Nemo tenetur seipsum accusers. No one is hound to accuse himself. Wing. Max. 486; Broom, Max. 968, 970 ; 1 Sharsw. Bla. Com. 443 ; 14 M. & W. 286 ; 107 Mass. 181.

Nemo tenetur seipsum infortuniis et perioulis ex ponere. No one is bound to expose himself to mis

fortune and dangers. Co. Litt. 253.

Nemo tenetur seipsum prodere. No one is bound to betray himself. 10 N. Y. 10; 7 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 57, 58; Broom, Max. 968.

Nemo videtur fraudare eos qui sciunt et consen tiunt. Na one is considered as deceiving those who know and consent. Dig. 20. 17. 145.

Nigrum nunquam excedere debit rubrum.. The black should never go beyond the red (i. e. the text of a statute should never be read in a sense more comprehensive than the rubric, or title). Trayner, Max. 372.

Nihil Wind potest rex quartz quod de jure potest.

The king can do nothing but what he can do legally. 11 Co. 74.

Nihil consensui tam contrarinm est quam vin at que metes. Nothing is so cOntrary to consent as force and fear. Dig. 50. 17. 116 ; Broom, Max. 278, n. Nihil dat qui non habet. He gives nothing who has nothing.

Nihil de re accrescit ei qui nihil in re quando jus accresceret habet. Nothing accrues to him who, when the right accrues, has nothing in the subject matter. Co. Litt. 188.

Nihil est enim liberale quod non idem justum.

For there is nothing generous which is not at the same time just. 2 Kent 441, note a.

Nihil est magis ration consentaneum quam eodem mode quodque dissoivere quo condatum est. Noth ing is more consonant to reason than that every thing should be dissolved in the same way in which it was made. Shep. Touch. 323.

Nihil facit error nominis cum de corpore constat. An error in the name is nothing when there is cer tainty as to the thing. n. Co. 21; 2 Kent 292 ; Bart. Max. 225.

Nihii habet forum ex scene. The court has noth ing to do with what is not before it.

Nihil in lege intolerabilius est, eandem rem di verso jure censeri. Nothing in law is more in tolerable than that the same case should be sub ject (in different courts) to different views of the law. 4 Co. 93.

Nihil infra regnunt subditos magis conservat in toanquilitate et concordia quam debita iegum ad ministrate. Nothing preserves in tranquillity and concord those who are subjected to the same gov ernment better than a due administration of the laws. 2 Inst. 158.

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