Legal Definition and Related Resources of Battery
Meaning of Battery
The wilful and unlawful use of force on the person of another. Every battery includes an assault which is merely an unlawful attempt or offer to use force to the injury of another. Mortin v Yeoham, 419 S. W.2d 937. Assault, however, does not include battery. When the assault culminates in a battery, the offense is assault and battery.
Battery Alternative Definition
Any unlawful beating, or other wrongful physical violence or constraint, inflicted on a human being without his consent. 2 Bish. Crim. Law, § 62; 17 Ala. 540; 9 N. H. 491. It includes every touching of another in a rude, angry, or hostile manner. 65 Ala. 520; 53 111. Ill; 67 Ind. 304.
Synonyms of Battery
noun
- assault
- attack
- beating
- harmful physical contact
- injurious force
- offensive action
- onslaught
- thrashing
- unlawful hitting
- unlawful striking
- unlawful touching
- Associated Concepts: assault and battery
- simple battery
Related Entries of Battery in the Encyclopedia of Law Project
Browse or run a search for Battery in the American Encyclopedia of Law, the Asian Encyclopedia of Law, the European Encyclopedia of Law, the UK Encyclopedia of Law or the Latin American and Spanish Encyclopedia of Law.
Battery in Historical Law
You might be interested in the historical meaning of this term. Browse or search for Battery in Historical Law in the Encyclopedia of Law.
Legal Abbreviations and Acronyms
Search for legal acronyms and/or abbreviations containing Battery in the Legal Abbreviations and Acronyms Dictionary.
Related Legal Terms
You might be also interested in these legal terms:
Mentioned in these terms
Assault, Grievous Bodily Harm.
Translate Battery from English to Spanish
Translation of Battery, with examples. More about free online translation into Spanish of Battery lesiones and other legal terms is available here.
- Battery lesiones
- Golpes
- Legal English Translation
Browse
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Battery in the Dictionary | Battery in our legal dictionaries | Browse the Legal Thesaurus | Find synonyms and related words of Battery |
Legal Maxims | Maxims are established principles that jurists use as interpretive tools, invoked more frequently in international law |
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Related topics | Battery in the World Encyclopedia of Law |
Notice
This definition of Battery Is based on the The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary . This definition needs to be proofread..
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https://legaldictionary.lawin.org/battery/ | The URI of Battery (more about URIs) |
Battery in the Dictionary of Law consisting of Judicial Definitions and Explanations of Words, Phrases and Maxims
Latin batuere, to beat. The unlawful beating of another. Any unlawful touching of person of another, either by the agressor or by any person or thing set in motion by him. The least touching of another”s person willfully, or in anger, is a battery. The law cannot draw the line between different degrees of violence, and therefore prohibits the first and lowest stage of it – every man”s person being sacred and no other having a right to meddle with it in the slightest manner. 3 Bl. Com. 120.
Note: This legal definition of Battery in the Dictionary of Law (English and American Jurisprudence) is from 1893.
English Spanish Translation of Battery
Agresión (En D. Penal: lesiones)
Find other English to Spanish translations from the Pocket Spanish English Legal Dictionary (print and online), the English to Spanish to English dictionaries (like Battery) and the Word reference legal translator.
See Also
“Assault; assault and battery; technical battery.”
Battery in Law Enforcement
Main Entry: Law Enforcement in the Legal Dictionary. This section provides, in the context of Law Enforcement, a partial definition of battery.
Grammar
This term is a noun.
Etimology of Battery
(You may find battery at the world legal encyclopedia and the etimology of more terms).
1530s, “action of battering,” in law, “the unlawful beating of another,” from Middle French batterie, from Old French baterie “beating, thrashing, assault” (12c.), from batre “to beat,” from Latin battuere (see batter (verb)). Meaning shifted in Middle French from “bombardment” (“heavy blows” upon city walls or fortresses) to “unit of artillery” (a sense recorded in English from 1550s). Extension to “electrical cell” (1748, first used by Ben Franklin) is perhaps from the artillery sense via notion of “discharges” of electricity. In Middle English, bateri meant only “forged metal ware.” In obsolete baseball jargon battery was the word for “pitcher and catcher” considered as a unit (1867, originally only the pitcher).
Resources
See Also
- Law Enforcement Officer
- Police Officer
- Law Enforcement Agency
Further Reading
- battery in A Dictionary of Law Enforcement (Oxford University Press)
- battery in the Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement
- A Treatise on the Police of the Metropolis
English Legal System: Battery
In the context of the English law, A Dictionary of Law provides the following legal concept of Battery :
The intentional or reckless application of physical force to someone without his consent. Battery is a form of *trespass to the person and is a *summary offence (punishable with a *fine at level 5 on the standard scale and/or six months’ imprisonment) as well as a tort, even if no actual harm results. If actual harm does result, however, the *consent of the victim may not prevent the act from being criminal, except when the injury is inflicted in the course of properly conducted sports or games (e.g. rugby or boxing) or as a result of reasonable surgical intervention
Compare assault; grievous bodily harm.
Meaning of Battery in the U.S. Legal System
Definition of Battery published by the National Association for Court Management: A beating, or wrongful physical violence. The actual threat to use force is an assault; the use of it is a battery, which usually includes an assault.
Battery is a crime and also the basis for a lawsuit as a civil wrong if there is damage. A battery is, for example, a willful and unlawful use of force or violence.
Battery is a crime and also the basis for a lawsuit as a civil wrong if there is damage. A battery is, for example, a willful and unlawful use of force or violence.
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