Ius - T

T

  • Ius tertii. The right of a third party. A tenant, bailee, etc., who pleads that the title is in some person other than his landlord, bailor, etc., is said to set up an ius tertii.
Ius testamentorum pertinet ordinario. Y. B. 4 Hen. VII., 13b. "The right of testaments belongs to the ordinary".
  • Ius tripertitum. In Roman law., a name applied to the Roman law of wills, in the time of Justinian, on account of its threefold derivation, viz., from the praetorian edict, from the civil law, and from the imperial constitutions. Maine, Anc. Law, 207.
Jus triplex est—proprietatis, possessionis, et possibilitatis. "Right is threefold—of property, of possession and of possibility".
  • Ius trium liberorum. In Roman law, a right or privilege allowed to the parent of three or more children. 2 Kent Comm. 85; 2 Bl. Comm. 247. These privileges were exemption from the trouble of guardianship, priority in bearing offices, and a triple allowance of grain. Adams, Rom. Ant. (Am. Ed.) 227.

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