quod est - translation to ιταλικό
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quod est - translation to ιταλικό

EITHER A POSSIBLE JUSTIFICATION OR AN EXCULPATION FOR BREAKING THE LAW
Necessity defense; Quod est necessarium est licitum

quod est      
cioè
Eastern Standard Time         
TIME ZONE OBSERVING UTC−05:00 DURING STANDARD TIME AND UTC−04:00 DURING DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME
Eastern time zone; Eastern Standard Time; Eastern Time; Eastern Standard Time Zone; Canadian/US Eastern Standard Time Zone; Eastern daylight time; Eastern standard time; North American Eastern Standard Time; North American Eastern Standard Time Zone; Eastern Standard Time (USA); Eastern Time zone; Eastern Daylight Time Zone; North American Eastern Daylight Time; Eastern time; EST5EDT; New York Time; Eastern Daylight Savings Time; EDST; North American Eastern Time Zone; Eastern Standard Time (North America); Eastern Daylight Time (North America); Eastern Daylight Time; NAEST; Eastern Timezone; EST Time; Clevland time zone; Heure Normale de l'Est; Heure Avancée de l'Est; ET time; Eastern Time Zone (Americas); U.S. Eastern Standard Time; Eastern time (United States); Eastern Seaboard Time; U.S. Eastern Daylight Time; EDT (time); Eastern Time Zone (North America); Cuba Daylight Time; N.A.E.S.T.; North American E.S.T.; North American EST; Time in New York; Time in Washington, D.C.; Cuba Standard Time; Time in New York (state); Eastern American; Washington, D.C. time; D.C. time; USA Eastern Standard Time; America/New York; USA Eastern Time; Time in Georgia (U.S. state); Time in Ohio; Time in Pennsylvania; Time in South Carolina; Time in Virginia; Time in West Virginia; ET (time); EDT time; Eastern Standard Zone; Time in Delaware; Time in Maryland; Time in New Jersey; Time in North Carolina; Haiti Standard Time; Haiti Daylight Time; Turks And Caicos Standard Time; Turks And Caicos Daylight Time; New York time
Eastern Standard Time, fase oraria delle province degli Stati Uniti e Canada situate sulla o presso la costa atlantica, EST
Catholic marriage         
  • Priest reading the blessing at a Catholic wedding, 2018
  • Marriage without religious rite
  • ''Ceremony of Marriage'' ([[Giulio Rosati]])
  • wedding feast in Cana]]
  • Betrothal and marriage around 1200
  • Tridentine Nuptial Mass, 1961
  • ''"Pope Paul III"'' (Artist: [[Titian]]) ''1490–1576'', c. 1543, ''Reign 13 October 1534 – 10 November 1549'', Presided over part of the [[Council of Trent]]
SACRAMENT AND SOCIAL INSTITUTION WITHIN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. THE CEREMONY AND RESULTING UNION OF HUSBAND AND WIFE IN THE CATHOLICISM
Marriage Catholic; Catholic wedding; Catholic Marriage; Catholic marriage; Marriage (Catholic Church); Marriages in Catholicism; Marriage in Catholicism; Catholic views of marriage; Quod proposuisti; Catholic matrimony
matrimonio cattolico

Ορισμός

quod
[kw?d]
¦ noun Brit. informal, dated prison.
Origin
C17: of unknown origin.

Βικιπαίδεια

Necessity (criminal law)

In the criminal law of many nations, necessity may be either a possible justification or an exculpation for breaking the law. Defendants seeking to rely on this defense argue that they should not be held liable for their actions as a crime because their conduct was necessary to prevent some greater harm and when that conduct is not excused under some other more specific provision of law such as self defense. As a matter of political expediency, states usually allow some classes of person to be excused from liability when they are engaged in socially useful functions but intentionally cause injury, loss or damage.

For example, a drunk driver might contend that they drove their car to get away from being kidnapped (cf. North by Northwest). Most common law and civil law jurisdictions recognize this defense, but only under limited circumstances. Generally, the defendant must affirmatively show (i.e., introduce some evidence) that (a) the harm they sought to avoid outweighs the danger of the prohibited conduct they are charged with; (b) they had no reasonable alternative; (c) they ceased to engage in the prohibited conduct as soon as the danger passed; and (d) they themselves did not create the danger they sought to avoid. Thus, with the "drunk driver" example cited above, the necessity defense will not be recognized if the defendant drove further than was reasonably necessary to get away from the kidnapper, or if some other reasonable alternative was available to them.

For another example, the fire services and other civil defence organizations have a general duty to keep the community safe from harm. If a fire or flood is threatening to spread out of control, it may be reasonably necessary to destroy other property to form a fire break, or to trespass on land to throw up mounds of earth to prevent the water from spreading.

These examples have the common feature of individuals intentionally breaking the law because they believe it to be urgently necessary to protect others from harm, but some states distinguish between a response to a crisis arising from an entirely natural cause (an inanimate force of nature), e.g. a fire from a lightning strike or rain from a storm, and a response to an entirely human crisis. Thus, parents who lack the financial means to feed their children cannot use necessity as a defense if they steal food. The existence of welfare benefits and strategies other than self-help defeat the claim of an urgent necessity that cannot be avoided in any way other than by breaking the law.

Further, some states apply a test of proportionality, where the defense would only be allowed where the degree of harm actually caused was a reasonably proportionate response to the degree of harm threatened. This is a legal form of cost–benefit analysis.