- In the
history of the
courts of
England and Wales, the writ of
quominus, or writ of quo minus, was a writ and
legal fiction which allowed the
Court of...
-
actions brought by the
monarch against non-paying debtors. With the writ of
quominus,
which allowed the
Exchequer to look at "common"
cases between subject...
- system,
holding a
similar jurisdiction (down to the use of the Writ of
Quominus to take over
cases from the
Irish Court of Chancery).
Following the Act...
-
Exchequer of
Pleas with
legal fictions, the Bill of Middle**** and Writ of
Quominus respectively. The
Common Pleas maintained its
exclusive jurisdiction over...
-
Pontifex Benedictus XVI declarat, ex
parte Sanctae Sedis,
nihil obstare quominus in
Causa Beatificationis et
Canonizationis Servi Dei Pii
Barnabae Gregorii...
-
nequeo mihi
temperare quominus unum
exemplum antiquitatis adferam ex quo
intellegi possit apud
populum etiam de
culturis agendi morem fuisse, qualiterque...
- King's
Bench and Exchequer,
through the Bill of Middle**** and Writ of
Quominus respectively. As a result, the
courts jocke**** for power. In 1828 Henry...
- QI—qui. Ql—Quinquenalis. qiđ or qið—quid or quidem. qˡ'—qualis. q·m·—
quominus. Q·M·P·—qui me presente. qń—qui nominatur. qⁿ—quando. Q·N·P·—Quæ nobis...
-
Bench (authorised to hear
cases involving the King), but with the Writ of
Quominus and the
Statute of Westminster, both
tried to
extend their jurisdiction...
-
claims common of pasture, to show by what
title the
common is claimed.
Quominus Quo warranto, a writ of
right for the king
against him who
claims or usurps...