- Subject-matter jurisdiction, also
called jurisdiction ratione materiae, is a
legal doctrine regarding the
ability of a
court to
lawfully hear and adjudicate...
- A
police court in
France is a
criminal court which judges all
classes of
minor offenses (contraventions)
committed by adults. More
serious offenses are...
- are of two types. The
first is
functional immunity, or
immunity ratione materiae. This is an
immunity granted to
people who
perform certain functions of...
-
correctional court is
determined either by: the
matters it
judges (ratione
materiæ), the
persons it may
judge (ratione personnæ) the
territorial scope of...
- UK), p. 151. Engelhart,
Johann Friedrich (1825) "Commentatio de vera
materiae sanguini purpureum colorem impertientis natura" [Commentary on the true...
- Justice, 2543 BE (2000), the
Criminal Court has the
jurisdiction ratione materiae (jurisdiction by
reason of matters) over all
criminal offences committed...
-
Roman law and
Canon law
created standards of reference, so-called
sedes materiae 'seat of the matter'. In
common law countries, the term "judicial gloss"...
- "Kepler
formed a [distinct]
concept of m**** ('amount of matter' (copia
materiae)), but
called it 'weight' as did
everyone at that time." Finally, in 1686...
- the
toxicity of
certain substances has been
described in all
Chinese materiae medicae.
Since TCM has
become more po****r in the
Western world, there...
-
inadmissible when it is
incompatible with the
requirements of
ratione materiae,
ratione temporis or
ratione personae, or if the case
cannot be proceeded...