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Definition of Intrinsic fraud
1. Noun. Fraud (as by use of forged documents or false claims or perjury) that misleads a court or jury and induces a finding for the one perpetrating the fraud.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Intrinsic Fraud
Literary usage of Intrinsic fraud
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ruling Case Law as Developed and Established by the Decisions and by William Mark McKinney, Burdett Alberto Rich (1916)
"... when he knew that he died leaving a will in another state.10 In some jurisdictions
a distinction is drawn between intrinsic fraud, by which a decree of ..."
2. Leading Cases in the Law of Scotland: Prepared from the Original Pleadings by George Ross (1851)
"The Court held the statement to be an averment of intrinsic fraud, and found, '
that the allegation of fraud is not relevant against ..."
3. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1911)
"... and the text-writers seem to adopt the principle as settled by the great weight
of authority, that perjury, being intrinsic fraud, is not ground for ..."
4. A Dictionary of American and English Law: With Definitions of the Technical by Stewart Rapalje, Robert Linn Lawrence (1888)
"intrinsic fraud.—First, the fraud "may be apparent from the intrinsic nature and
subject of the bargain itself, such as no man in hie senses and not under ..."