Valor Maritagii

Legal Definition and Related Resources of Valor maritagii

Meaning of Valor maritagii

(Lat.) The amount forfeited under the ancient tenures by a ward to a guardian who had offered her a marriage without disparagement, which she refused. It was so much as a jury would assess, or as any one would give bona fide, for the value of the marriage. Litt. 110. A writ which lay against the ward, on coming of full age, for that he was not married by his guardian, for the value of the marriage, and this, though no convenient marriage had been offered. Termes de la Ley.

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This definition of Valor Maritagii is based on the The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary . This entry needs to be proofread.

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Concept of “Valor Maritagii”

Traditional meaning of valor maritagii in English (with some legal use of this latin concept in England and the United States in the XIX Century) [1]: (in Latin) The value of the marriage; see 2nd Book (“The Rights of Things”), Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England 70, 88.

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Notes and References

  1. Based on A Concise Law Dictionary of Words, Phrases and Maxims, “Valor Maritagii”, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1911, United States. It is also called the Stimson’s Law dictionary. This term and/or definition may be absolete.

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