p ex - ορισμός. Τι είναι το p ex
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Τι (ποιος) είναι p ex - ορισμός

LEGAL DECISION OR PROCEEDING DURING WHICH NOT ALL PARTIES TO THE DISPUTE ARE PRESENT
Ex Parte; Ex parte application; Ex-Party Judgement; Ex p; Exparte; Ex-parte

Ex (relationship)         
PERSON WITH WHOM A PERSON WAS ONCE IN AN INTIMATE RELATIONSHIP
Ex-boyfriend; Ex-girlfriend; Ex boyfriend; Ex girlfriend
In social relationships, an ex (plural is exes) is someone with whom a person was once associated, in a relationship or marriage. As a prefix, ex- can refer to a variety of different relationships; for example, one might refer to a music group's ex-guitarist, or someone's ex-friend.
Ex p James         
Ex parte James
Ex parte James (1803) 32 ER 385 is an insolvency and company law case, concerning conflicts of interest, and the absolute duty to avoid them.
ex officio         
AUTOMATIC MEMBERSHIP BY VIRTUE OF HOLDING A SPECIFIC OTHER POSITION
Ex officio; Ex-officio; Ex-Officio; Ex-officio member; Ex officio members
a (ex oh-fish-ee-oh)dj. Latin for "from the office," to describe someone who has a right because of an office held, such as being allowed to sit on a committee simply because one is president of the corporation.

Βικιπαίδεια

Ex parte

In law, ex parte () is a Latin term meaning literally "from/out of the party/faction of" (name of party/faction, often omitted), thus signifying "on behalf of (name)". An ex parte decision is one decided by a judge without requiring all of the parties to the dispute to be present. In English law and its derivatives, namely Australian, New Zealand, Canadian, South African, Indian, and U.S. legal doctrines, ex parte means a legal proceeding brought by one party in the absence of and without representation of or notification to the other party.

The term is also used more loosely to refer to improper unilateral contacts with a court, arbitrator, or represented party without notice to the other party or counsel for that party. The phrase was common in the titles of habeas corpus and judicial review cases until the end of the twentieth century, because those cases were originally brought by the Crown on behalf of the claimant. In Commonwealth common law jurisdictions, the title typically appeared as R v (Defendant), ex parte (Claimant); in the US, this was shortened to Ex parte (Claimant). A proceeding in an executive agency to establish a right, such as patent prosecution, can also be ex parte.