Italian law

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business law

    legal profession

    • Lee Kuan Yew
      In legal profession: Medieval Europe

      …southern France and in central Italy. The Christian church, which became the official Roman imperial church after 381 ce, developed its own canon law, courts, and practitioners and followed the general outline of later Roman legal organization. Because of its success among the invaders, the church was in a position…

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    • Lee Kuan Yew
      In legal profession: Worldwide legal profession

      …division still formally exists in Italy, it is no longer of practical importance. In Latin America the fused profession is general. Notaries as a separate specialized branch of the profession exist, however, in most civil-law countries.

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    • education
      • William Blackstone
        In legal education: School examinations

        …in some countries, such as Italy, though in the United States they are rare. French universities typically use both written and oral examinations. Some English and overseas Commonwealth universities hold oral examinations to confirm or resolve doubtful results on written papers or as a prerequisite to the award of first…

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    • prosecuting
      • Lee Kuan Yew
        In legal profession: Public-directed practice

        In Italy and France the prosecutor is a member of the judiciary. Both prosecutors and judges receive the same training, and both may move from one role to the other in the course of their advancement in the civil service. In Germany, although the prosecutor is…

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    procedural law

    • Justinian I
      In procedural law: Medieval European law

      …the Germanic tribal traditions in Italy and France, and somewhat later in Germany, though not all elements of the Germanic procedure disappeared. By contrast, in Scandinavia indigenous procedure adapted itself and was able to resist displacement by foreign law.

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    • Justinian I
      In procedural law: Appeals and other methods of review

      , France and Italy), the arguments by the parties may be augmented by an officer representing the Ministry of Justice. If a court reverses a lower court ruling, it generally does not substitute its own judgment for the erroneous judgment below but merely annuls the erroneous judgment and…

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    • evidence
      • In evidence: Confessions and admissions

        …of such countries as France, Italy, and Spain, an admission made before the court is a form of evidence that leads to conclusive proof binding upon the court. But admissions made out of court are subject to free evaluation by the judge and do not exclude further evidence.

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    • jurisdiction
      • In competence and jurisdiction

        …is a French national; in Italy some Italian link must be shown by a nonnational for jurisdiction to be exercised; and in Germany and Austria, by contrast, the location of property often determines jurisdiction.

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