Legal Definition and Related Resources of Casu consimili
Meaning of Casu consimili
See “Consimili Casu.
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This definition of Casu Consimili is based on the The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary . This entry needs to be proofread.
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Concept of “Casu Consimili”
Traditional meaning of casu consimili in English (with some legal use of this latin concept in England and the United States in the XIX Century) [1]: (in Latin) 1. In a similar case; see ACTION ON THE CASE, 2. An old writ of entry which lay for a reversioner to recover land alienated by a tenant for life or by the courtesy, for a greater estate than he held; see 3rd Book (“Of Private Wrongs”), Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England 51, 183; so called because like the writ of Casu proviso, which was a similar writ brought against a tenant in dower. Both could be brought during the life of the tenant, thus differing from Ad communem legem.
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Notes and References
- Based on A Concise Law Dictionary of Words, Phrases and Maxims, “Casu Consimili”, 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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