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Definition of Justiciability
1. Noun. (legal) : The ability of a subject matter to be evaluated and resolved by a court. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Justiciability
1. [n -TIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Justiciability
Literary usage of Justiciability
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of Jeremy Bentham by Jeremy Bentham, John Bowring (1839)
"... for the purpose of justiciability, it will be because, had the thing or the
person in question been forthcoming, execution and effect might in a certain ..."
2. Jurisdiction and Practice of Federal Courts: A Handbook for Practitioners by Charles P Williams (1917)
"(3) The ease arises both under the constitution and under some other ground of
federal justiciability, of such a character that if the case rested solely ..."
3. Rationale of judicial evidence, specially applied to English practice, from by Jeremy Bentham (1827)
"OF AVOIDANCE OK justiciability, CONSIDERED AS AFFORDING EVIDENCE OF DELINQUENCY.
... Considered as a means of avoiding justiciability, the effect of ..."
4. Cryptography & Privacy Sourcebook (1996): Documents on Wiretapping edited by David Banisar (1996)
"Defendants pose the justiciability issue as one of subject matter ... As those
questions are distinct and defendants arguments go to justiciability, ..."
5. The Advocate of Peace by American Peace Society (1912)
"... upon the justiciability or non-justici- ability of each dispute as it arises.
The United States delegation at the second conference made an attempt to ..."