facĕre
111Deus solus haeredem facere potest, non homo — God alone can make an heir, man cannot …
112Distinguenda sunt tempora; aliud est facere, aliud perficere — Times must be distinguished; it is one thing to act and another to finish. The maxim has been applied as asserting the doctrine that the law should be construed in a manner to some extent affected by public sentiment. Blocs v Tobey, 19 Mass 320,… …
113Ecclesia fungitur vice minoris; meliorem conditionem suam facere potest, deteriorem nequaquam — The church occupies the position of a minor; she can make her own condition better, but never worse …
114finem facere — To impose a fine; to pay a fine …
115Idem est facere, et nolle prohibere cum possis — It is the same thing to do a thing as not to prohibit it when you can …
116In re communi neminem dominorum jure facere quicquam, invito altero, posse — No one of the owners of common property may exercise any dominion over it against the will of another of them …
117Inter alios res gestas aliis non posse praejudicium facere saepe constitutum est — It has often been decided that matters which were transacted between some persons cannot operate as a prejudice to other persons …
118Justum non est aliquem antenatum mortuum facere bastardum, qui pro tots vita sua pro legitimo habetur — It is not just to make a dead man a bastard, who throughout his whole life was regarded as legitimate …
119legem facere — To make an oath; to wager one s law …
120Libertas est naturalis facultas ejus, quod cuique facere libet, nisi quod de jure aut vi prohibetur — Liberty is a person s natural power of doing as it may please him, unless that is prohibited by law or by force …