Lat. A writ of nuisance, which, by 15 Edw. I., lay against him to whom a house or other thing that caused a nuisance descended or was alienated ; whereas, before that statute the action lay only against him who first levied or caused the nuisance to the damage of his neighbor. Cowell. Qui abjurat regnnm amittit regnum, ?ed non regent; patriam, sed non patrem patriae. 7 Coke, 9. He who abjures the realm leaves the realm, but not the king; the country, but not the father of the country. Qui accusat integrse famee sit, et non eriminosus. Let him who accuses be of clear fame, and not criminal. 3 Inst 26. Qui acquirit sibi acquirit hseredibua. He who acquires for himself acquires for his heirs. Tray. Latin: Max. 496. Qui adimit medium dirimit flnem. He who takes away the mean destroys the end. Co. Litt 161a. He that deprives a man of the mean by which he ought to come to a thing deprives him of the thing itself. Id.; Litt ! 237. Qui aliquid statuerit, parte inaudita altera sequum licet dixerit, baud sequ um f ecerit. He who determines any matter without hearing both sides, though he may have decided right has not done justica 6 Coke, 52a; 4 BL Comm. 283. Qui alterius jure utitur, eodem jure uti debet. He who uses the right of another ought to use the same right Poth. Traits De Change, pt 1, c. 4,
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Law Dictionary » Q » QUESTUS EST NOBIS