|
Definition of Inadmissible
1. Adjective. Not deserving to be admitted. "Inadmissible evidence"
Similar to: Impermissible
Antonyms: Admissible
Derivative terms: Inadmissibility
Definition of Inadmissible
1. a. Not admissible; not proper to be admitted, allowed, or received; as, inadmissible testimony; an inadmissible proposition, or explanation.
Definition of Inadmissible
1. Adjective. Not admissible, especially that cannot be admitted as evidence at a trial ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inadmissible
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inadmissible
Literary usage of Inadmissible
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1918)
"610, 89 NE 756, holding that evidence is inadmissible as- to the ... For example,
evidence is inadmissible as to their ill health or as to specific ..."
2. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1922)
"The controlling reason, as we think, why involuntary confessions are generally
inadmissible, is that their introduction would violate the constitutional ..."
3. A Treatise of the Law of Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes, Bank-notes and by Sir John Barnard Byles, George Sharswood (1883)
"r*oQ-i *descriptive, the order to place the sum to the account of the company as
a direction how to reimburse himself, and the letter of advice inadmissible ..."
4. The Law of Contracts by Samuel Williston, Clarence Martin Lewis (1920)
"Other inadmissible collateral agreements. Following the analogy of cases holding
that though parol conditions precedent to the effectiveness of a written ..."
5. A Treatise on the Law of Criminal Evidence: Including the Rules Regulating by Harry Clay Underhill (1898)
"Stolen goods found through inadmissible confession.—-The rule that those portions
of an inadmissible confession which are conclusively corroborated by the ..."
6. Handbook of the Law of Evidence by John Jay McKelvey (1907)
"REPUTATION AS TO ACT CHARGED inadmissible. 126. Proof of the general reputation
of a party for having committed the particular act charged in an alleged ..."