ex aequo et bono - перевод на Английский
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ex aequo et bono - перевод на Английский

LATIN MAXIM
Ex-aequo; Ex bono et aequo; Ex aequo

ex aequo et bono         
Ex aequo et bono, (Latein) nach Recht und Gerechigkeit
pro bono         
  • Sen. Jose W. Diokno, a human rights lawyer who coined the term "developmental legal aid"
PROFESSIONAL WORK UNDERTAKEN VOLUNTARILY AND WITHOUT PAYMENT
Pro-bono; Probono; Pro bono publico; Free legal assistance; Pro bono legal counsel; Pro bono legal services
Pro bono, (Latein) gebührenfrei angeboten, kostenlos bereitgestellt (bezieht sich oft auf Rechtsdienste)
ex officio         
AUTOMATIC MEMBERSHIP BY VIRTUE OF HOLDING A SPECIFIC OTHER POSITION
Ex officio; Ex-officio; Ex-Officio; Ex-officio member; Ex officio members
vom Amts her (während der Dienstausübung, von der Befugnis her)

Определение

pro bono
adj. short for pro bono publico, Latin for "for the public good," legal work performed by lawyers without pay to help people with legal problems and limited or no funds, or provide legal assistance to organizations involved in social causes such as environmental, consumer, minority, youth, battered women and education organizations and charities.

Википедия

Ex aequo et bono

Ex aequo et bono (Latin for "according to the right and good" or "from equity and conscience") is a Latin phrase that is used as a legal term of art. In the context of arbitration, it refers to the power of arbitrators to dispense with consideration of the law but consider solely what they consider to be fair and equitable in the case at hand. However, a decision ex aequo et bono is distinguished from a decision on the basis of equity (equity intra legem), "Whereas an authorisation to decide a question ex aequo et bono is an authorisation to decide without deference to the rules of law, an authorisation to decide on a basis of equity does not dispense the judge from giving a decision based upon law, even though the law be modified".

Article 38(2) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) provides that the court may decide cases ex aequo et bono only if the parties agree. In 1984, the ICJ decided a case using "equitable criteria" in creating a boundary in the Gulf of Maine for Canada and the US. This was not, however, in relation to Art. 38(2) which has never been invoked by the parties in a dispute before the ICJ. It was an example of referring to 'equity' as a general principle of law under Art. 38 (1) (c).

Article 33 of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law's Arbitration Rules (1976) provides that the arbitrators shall consider only the applicable law unless the arbitral agreement allows the arbitrators to consider ex aequo et bono, or amiable compositeur, instead. This rule is also expressed in many national and subnational arbitration laws such as section 22 of the Commercial Arbitration Act 1984 (NSW). It is also embodied under Section 28(2) of the Indian arbitration law - Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996 ("The arbitral tribunal shall decide ex aequo et bono or as amicable compositeur only if the parties have expressly authorised it to do so")

On the other hand, the constituent treaty of the Eritrea–Ethiopia Claims Commission explicitly forbids the body from interpreting ex aequo et bono.

Примеры употребления для ex aequo et bono
1. The Commission shall not have the power to make decisions ex aequo et bono" Ambassador Yamamoto and the Tigrayan regime in Ethiopia know that the phrase ex aequo et bono means that the Boundary Commission was required to follow the law, and made its decision based on the Colonial Treaties and applicable international law, and not on its own opinions of what is right and good.