substantial defect

  • 1substantial performance — see performance Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. substantial performance …

    Law dictionary

  • 2substantial capacity test — n: a test used in many jurisdictions when considering an insanity defense which relieves a defendant of criminal responsibility if at the time of the crime as a result of mental disease or defect the defendant lacked the capacity to appreciate… …

    Law dictionary

  • 3substantial capacity test — Term used in the definition of legal insanity proposed by the Model Penal Code (No. 4.01) to the effect that a person is not responsible for criminal conduct if at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect he lacks… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 4Ecclesiastical Censures —     Ecclesiastical Censures     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Ecclesiastical Censures     Medicinal and spiritual punishments imposed by the Church on a baptized, delinquent, and contumacious person, by which he is deprived, either wholly of in part …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 5irregularity — A failure to follow appropriate and necessary rules of practice or procedure, omitting some act essential to the due and orderly conduct of the action or proceeding, or doing it in an improper manner. Sache v Gillette, 101 Minn 169, 112 NW 386. A …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 6Altar Breads — • Bread is one of the two elements absolutely necessary for the sacrifice of the Eucharist Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Altar Breads     Altar Breads      …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 7ineffectual judgment — A judgment which grants full relief to the successful party but is unenforceable in his behalf because of substantial defect. Anno: 69 ALR2d 727, § 11[b] …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 8searching record — The familiar rule that a demurrer or its equivalent in a motion searches the whole record, is carried back to the first substantial defect, and that judgment is to be given against the party who committed the first fault in pleading, for him who …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 9cardiovascular disease — Introduction       any of the diseases, whether congenital or acquired, of the heart and blood vessels (blood vessel). Among the most important are atherosclerosis, rheumatic heart disease, and vascular inflammation. Cardiovascular diseases are a …

    Universalium

  • 10Insanity defense — For similar defences in Canada and Australia, see mental disorder defence …

    Wikipedia