Ad quod damnum or ad damnum is a Latin phrase meaning "According to the harm" or "appropriate to the harm." It is used in tort law as a measure of damage inflicted, and implying a remedy, if one exists, ought to correspond specifically and only to the damage suffered. It is also used in pleading, as the statement of the plaintiff's money loss or damages claimed. See Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 8(a)(3).
Four
The term "damnum sine injuria" is more properly stated "damnum sine injuria esse potest". It means "There may be an injury inflicted without any act of injustice." There is another term like it that is "damnum absque injuria", which means damage or harm without an injury in the legal sense. In other words a loss or injury to someone which does not give that person a right to sue the person causing the loss.
Clergymen are men of the clergy, as in church men, and it's not a legal term.
it means it is legal to have a foot
The term quad in any language means a box shape. When one applies this to the architecture arena it simply means something boxed in by a building. An example some will use is the courtyard which is boxed in by a building.
in this section only
Praecipe is a legal term for an order.
legal term-protects you in a contract.
Order to Show Cause
At first glance
It means "Tenant Holding Over."
Findings and Order After Hearing acr()