Blacks Law Dict. 1st ed
NEMO DEBET, ETC.
NEMO NASCITUR ARTIFEX
810
rightly to understand one part before he has again and again read through the whole. Broom, Max. 593. Nemo est hseres viventis. No one is the heir of a living person. Co. Litt. 8a, 226. No one can be heir during the life of his an cestor. Broom, Max. 522, 523. No person can be the actual complete heir of another till the ancestor is previously dead. 2 Bl. Comm. 208. Nemo est supra leges. No one is above the law. Lofft, 142. Nemo ex alterius facto prssgravari debet. No man ought to be burdened in consequence of another's act. 2 Kent, Comm. 646. Nemo ex consilio obligatur. No man is bound in consequence of his advice. Mere advice will not create the obligation of a mandate. Story, Bailm. § 155. Nemo ex dolo suo proprio relevetur, aut auxilium capiat. Let no one be re lieved or gain an advantage by his own fraud. A civil law maxim. Nemo ex proprio dolo consequitur actionem. No one maintains an action aris ing out of his own wrong. Broom, Max. 297. Nemo ex suo delicto meliorem suam conditionem facere potest. No one can make his condition better by his own mis deed. Dig. 50, 17,134, 1. Nemo in propria causa testis esse debet. No one ought to be a witness in his own cause. 3 Bl. Comm. 371. Nemo inauditus condemnari debet si non sit contumax. No man ought to be condemned without being heard unless he be contumacious. Jenk. Cent. p. 18, case 12, in marg. Nemo jus sibi dicere potest. No one can declare the law for himself. No one is entitled to take the law into his own hands. Tray. Lat. Max. 366. Nemo militans Deo implicetur sec ularibus negotiis. No man who is warring for [in the service of] God should be involved in secular matters. Co. Litt. 706. A prin ciple of the old law that men of religion were not bound to go in person with the king to war. Nemo nascitur artifex. Co. Litt. 97. No one is born an artificer.
Nemo debet bis puniri pro uno de licto. No man ought to be punished twice for one offense. 4 Coke, 43a; 11 Coke, 596. No man shall be placed in peril of legal pen alties more than once upon the same accusa tion. Broom, Max. 348. Nemo debet bis vexari [si constet curise quod sit] pro una et eadem causa. No man ought to be twice troubled or har assed [if it appear to the court that it is] for one and the same cause. 5 Coke, 61a. No man can be sued a second time for the same cause of action, if once judgment has been rendered. See Broom, Max. 327, 348. No man can be held to bail a second time at the suit of the same plaintiff for the same cause of action. 1 Chit. Archb. Pr. 476. Nemo debet esse judex in propria causa. No man ought to be a judge in his own cause. 12 Coke, 114a. A maxim de rived from the civil law. Cod. 3, 5. Called a "fundamental rule of reason and of nat ural justice." Burrows, Sett. Cas. 194, 197. Nemo debet immiscere se rei ad se nib.il pertinenti. No one should intermed dle with a thing that in no respect concerns him. Jenk. Cent. p. 18, case 32. Nemo debet in communione invitus teneri. No one should be retained in a part nership against his will. 2 Sandf. 568, 593; 1 Johns. 106, 114. Nemo debet locupletari aliena jactura. No one ought to be enriched by another's loss. Dig. 6, 1, 48, 65; 2 Kent, Comm. 336; 1 Kames, Eq. 331. Nemo debet locupletari ex alterius incommodo. No one ought to be made rich out of another's loss. Jenk. Cent. 4; 10 Barb. 626, 633. Nemo debet rem suam sine facto aut defectu suo amittere. No man ought to lose his property without his own act or de fault. Co. Litt. 263a. Nemo duobus utatur officiis. 4 Inst. 100. No one should hold two offices, »*. e. f at the same time. Nemo ejusdem tenementi simul potest esse hseres et dominus. No one can at the same time be the heir and the owner of the same tenement. See 1 Reeve, Eng. Law, 106. Nemo enim allquam partem reote in telligere possit antequam totum iterum atque iterum perlegerit. No one is able
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