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- Ius imaginis. In Roman law the right to use or display pictures or statutes of ancestors; somewhat analogous to the right in English law to bear a coat of arms.
- Ius immunitatis. In civil law, the law of immunity or exemption from the burden of public office. Dig. 50, 6.
- Ius in personam. A right against a person; a right that gives its possessor a power to oblige another person to give or procure, to do or not to do, something.
- Ius in re. "a right in a thing" -- contrast ius ad rem.
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- Ius in re propria, denoting full ownership; distinguished from jus in re aliena, a mere easement
- Ius in re inhaerit ossibus usufructarii. "A right in the thing cleaves to the person of the usufructuary".
- Ius incognitum. An unknown law. This term is applied by civilians to obsolete laws. Bowyer, Mod. Civil Law. 33.
- Ius individuum. An individual or indivisible right; a right incapable of division. 36 Eng. Law & Eq. 25.
- Ius italicum. A Roman law term descriptive of the aggregate of rights, privileges, and franchises possessed by the cities and inhabitants of Italy, outside of the city of Rome, and afterwards extended to some of the colonies and provinces of the empire, consisting principally in the right to have a free constitution, to be exempt from land tax, and to have title to land regarded as Quiritian property. See Gibbon, Rom. Emp. c. xvii ; Mackeld. Rom. Law, § 43.
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- Jus jurandi forma verbii differt, re convenit; hunc enim sensum habere debet: ut Deus invecetur. Grot, de Jur. В., 1. 2, e. 13, § 10. "The form of taking an oath differs in language, agrees in meaning; for it ought to have this sense: that the Deity is invoked."
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