libellary
Collocations
4ADJ.
so-called
LIBELLARY + NOUN
period, procedure
PREP.
during, in
ADV.
especially, essentially
Definitions
adj
Pertaining to the Roman form of law in which the plaintiff files a formal petition.
Towards the end of the formulary period, during the libellary period and especially at the time of the Justinian compilation the word condictio conveyed a purely juridical notion and was equivalent to reptitio, repetere.
Chancery pleading and practice, like the Roman adjective law, in its third or libellary stage, were essentially unitary in character.
Formally recorded by the court.
Any type of investiture would serve this purpose, and in fact we read in the authorities of churches which were granted to clerks in the form of a libellary contract, métayage or Teilpacht, a precaria, and even for the duration of a number of lives.
It was the censive in France, the peasant libellary contract in Italy during the 13th and 14th centuries, i.e., the relationship between feudal lord and peasant in which economic elements were overwhelmingly predominant and extra-economic compulsion in the form of personal dependence was generally absent.
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Example Bank
3Towards the end of the formulary period, during the libellary period and especially at the time of the Justinian compilation the word condictio conveyed a purely juridical notion and was equivalent to
WiktionaryChancery pleading and practice, like the Roman adjective law, in its third or libellary stage, were essentially unitary in character.
WiktionaryIn 1930 Steinwenter, in a study devoted to the nature of commencement of trial (litis contestatio) in the so-called libellary procedure of the later Empire, made the first reference to P. Thead. 16 an
Wiktionary