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Definition of Judicial admission
1. Noun. (law) an agreement or concession made by parties in a judicial proceeding (or by their attorneys) relating to the business before the court; must be in writing unless they are part of the court record. "A stipulation of fact was made in order to avoid delay"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Judicial Admission
Literary usage of Judicial admission
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on the Law of Bills of Exchange, Promissory-notes, Bank-notes by Robert Thomson (1836)
"A judicial admission, indeed, though in a written pleading, can scarcely be
considered as an acknowledgment by the debtor's writ, since a pleading is not ..."
2. A Treatise on the System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law: Including the by John Henry Wigmore (1915)
"Morrison, 87 Ohio 215, 100 NE 817 (counsel's opening statement is ordinarily to
be treated as a judicial admission of facts not denied, and thus a nonsuit ..."
3. A Pocket Code of the Rules of Evidence in Trials at Law by John Henry Wigmore (1910)
"Distinguish (1) the ordinary informal or extra-judicial admission (Rule ...
1 Sometimes also traditionally termed a judicial admission or solemn admission. ..."
4. Hammon on Evidence: Covering Burden of Proof, Presumptions, Judicial Notice by Louis Lougee Hammon (1907)
"Where a judicial admission is offered in evidence, the entire writing must be
looked to in order to determine the nature and extent of the admission ;01 and ..."
5. A Supplement to A Treatise on the System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law by John Henry Wigmore (1915)
"Morrison, 87 Ohio 215, 100 NE 817 (counsel's opening statement is ordinarily to
be treated as a judicial admission of facts not denied, and thus a nonsuit ..."
6. The Civil Laws of France to the Present Time: Supplemented by Notes by France, David Mitchell Aird (1875)
"The allegation of a purely verbal extra-judicial admission is useless in all ...
A judicial admission is a declaration made in court by the party or his ..."