Lat. When they shall come in. The name of a judgment sometimes given against an executor, especially on a plea of plene administravit, which empowers the plaintiff to have the benefit of assets which may at any time thereafter come to the hands of the executor. Quando aliquid mandatur, mandatur et omne per quod pervenitur ad illud. 5 Coke, 116. When anything is commanded, everything by which it can be accomplished is also commanded. Qnando aliqnid prohibetnr ex directo, prohibetnr et per obliquum. Co. LAtt 223. When anything is prohibited directly, it is prohibited also indirectly. Qnando aliqnid prohibetnr, prohibetnr et omne per quod devenitur ad illnd. When anything is prohibited, everything by which it is reached is prohibited also. 2 Inst 48. That which cannot be done directly shall not be done indirectly. Broom; Max. 489. Qnando aliquis aliqnid eoncedit, con cedere videtnr et id sine qno res nti non potest. When a person grants anything, he is supposed to grant that also without which the thing cannot be used. 3 Kent, Comm. 421. When the use of a thing is granted, everything is granted by which the grantee may have and enjoy such use. Id. Qnando oharta continet generalem elansnlam, posteaqne deseendit ad verba specialia qnee clausula general! snnt consentanea, interpretanda est charta secundum verba specialia. When a deed contains a general clause, and afterwards descends to special words which are agreeable to the general clause, the deed is to be interpreted according to the special words. 8 Coke, 1546. Qnando de una et eadem re duo one rabiles existunt, nuns, pro insufficientia alterius, de integro onerabitur. When there are two persons liable for one and the same thing, one of them, in case of default of the other, shall be charged with the whole. 2 Inst. 277. Quando dispositio referri potest ad dnas res ita qnod secundum relationem nnam vitietnr et secundum alteram ntilis sit, turn facienda est relatio ad illam ut valeat dispositio. 6 Coke, 76. When a disposition may refer to two things, so that by the former it would be vitiated, and by the latter it would be preserved, then the relation is to be made to the latter, so that the disposition may be valid. Qnando diversi desiderantnr actus ad aliquem statnm perficiendum, pins re spicit lex actum originalem. When different acts are required to the formation of any estate, the law chiefly regards the original act. 10 Coke, 49a. When to the perfection of an estate or interest divers acts or things are requisite, the law has more regard to the original act, for that is the fundamental part on which all the others are founded. Id. Qnando jus domini regis et snbditl eoncurrunt, jus regis prseferri debet. 9 Coke, 129. When the right of king and of subject concur, the king’s right should be preferred. Qnando lex aliqnid alien! eoncedit, concedere videtnr et id sine qno res ipsse esse non potest. 5 Coke, 47. When the law gives a man anything, it gives him that also without which the thing itself cannot exist. Qnando lex aliqnid alien! eoncedit, omnia incidentia tacite conceduntur. 2 Inst. 326. When the law gives anything to any one, all incidents are tacitly given. da. When a law is special, but its reason [or object] general, the law is to be understood generally. 2 Inst 83. Qnando licet id quod majus, videtnr et licere id qnod minus. Shep. Touch. 429. When the greater is allowed, the less is to be understood as allowed also. Qnando mnlier nobilis nupserit igno bili, desinit esse nobilis nisi nobilitas nativa fnerit. 4 Coke, 118. When a noble woman marries a man not noble, she ceases to be noble, unless her nobility was born with her. Qnando plus fit qnam fieri debet, videtnr etiam illnd fieri quod faciendum est. When more is done than ought to be done, that at least shall be considered as performed which should have been performed, [as, if a man, having a power to make a lease for ten years, make one for twenty years, it shall be void only for the surplus.] Broom, Max. 177; 5 Coke, 115; 8 Coke, 85a. Qnando qnod ago non valet nt ago, valeat quantum valere potest. When that which I do does not have effect as I do it, let it have as much effect as it can. Jackson ex dem. Troup v. Blodget, 16 Johns. (N. Y.) 172, 178; Vandervolgen v. Yates, 3 Barb. Ch. (N. Y.) 242, 261. Qnando res non valet nt ago, valeat quantum valere potest. When a thing is of no effect as I do it it shall have effect as far as [or in whatever way] it can. Cowp. 600. Qnando verba et mens eongrnnnt, non est interpretation! locus. When th» words and the mind agree, there is no place for interpretation. Qnando verba statnti snnt specialia, ratio antem generalis, generaliter statn tum est intelligendum. When the words of a statute are special, but the reason or object of it general, the statute is to be construed generally. 10 Coke, 1016.
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