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ALL

Collectively, this term designates the whole number of particulars, individuals, or separate items; distributively, it may be equivalent to “each” or “every.” State v. Maine Cent. R. Co., 66 Me. 510; Sherburne v. Sischo, 143 Mass. 442, 9 N. E. 797. All and singular. A comprehensive term often employed in conveyances, wills, and the like, which includes the aggregate or whole and also each of the separate items or components. MeClaskey v. Barr (C. C.) 54 Fed. 798AU faults. A sale of goods with “all faults” covers, in the absence of fraud on the part of the vendor, all such faults and defects as are not inconsistent with the identity of the goods as the goods described. Whitney v. Boardman, 118 Mass. 242. All fours. Two cases or decisions which are alike in all material respects, and precisely similar in all the circumstances affecting their determination, are said to be or to run on “all fours.”All the estate. The name given in England to the short clause in a conveyance or other assurance which purports to convey “all the estate, right, title, interest, claim, and demand” of the grantor, lessor, etc., in the property dealt with. Dav. Conv. 93. ALLEGANS CONTRARIA NON EST AUDIENDUS. One alleging contrary or contradictory things (whose statements contradict each other) is not to be heard. 4 Inst. 279. Applied to the statements of a witness.
ALLEGANS MAN TURPITUDINEM NON EST AUDIENDUS. One who alleges his own infamy is not to be heard. 4 Inst 279.
ALLEGARI MEN DEBUIT QUOD PROBATUM MOM RELEVAT. That ought not to be alleged which, if proved, is not relevant 1 Ch. Cas. 45.

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