judĭces in
41ad quaestiones juris respondent judices; ad quacstiones facti respondent juratores — Judges answer questions of law; jurors answer questions of fact …
42De jure judices, de facto juratores, respondent — The judges decide questions of law, the jurors, questions of fact …
43De jure respondent judices, de facto juratores — The judges decide questions of law, the jurors, questions of fact. Piles v Bouldin (US) 11 Wheat 325, 330, 6 L Ed 486, 487 …
44Juratores soot judices facti — The jurors are the judges of fact …
45Omnibus qui reipublicae praesunt etiam mando, ut omnibus aequos se prebeant judices, perinde ac in judiciali libro scriptum habetur; nee quiquam formident quin jus commune audacter libereque dicant — To all those who govern the republic, I charge them to prove themselves to be fair judges as it is written in the Dome Book and boldly and freely to declare the common law. See 1 Bl Comm 65 …
46Quemadmodum ad quaestionem facti non respondent judices, ita ad quacstionem juris non respondent juratores — Just as judges do not answer questions of fact, so jurors do not answer questions of law …
47selecti judices — (Roman law.) Chosen judges, judges chosen by the praetor, of whom those who were to serve were appointed by lot. See 3 Bl Comm 366 …
48Ubi non est manifesta injustitia, judices habentur pro bonis viris, et judicatum pro veritate — Where there is no manifest injustice, judges ought to be regarded as honest men, and their judgment as truth …
49judge — 1 / jəj/ vb judged, judg·ing [Old French jugier, from Latin judicare, from judic judex judge, from jus right, law + dicere to decide, say] vt 1: to hear and decide (as a litigated question) in a court of justice judge a case 2: to pronounce after …
50Palatinus — Palatinus, (plural: Palatini) Latin for palatial , enters in designations for various ecclesiastical offices, primarily, of certain high officials in the papal court. Medieval Palatine judgesIn the Middle Ages, the judices palatini ( papal palace …