Actio personalis moritur cum persona

Actio personalis moritur cum persona

Actio personalis moritur cum persona is a Latin expression meaning "a personal action dies with the person".

Effect of the maxim

Some legal causes of action can survive the death of the claimant or plaintiff, for example actions founded in contract law. However, some actions are personal to the plaintiff, defamation of character being one notable example. Therefore, such an action, where it relates to the private character of the plaintiff, comes to an end on his death, whereas an action for the publication of a false and malicious statement which causes damage to the plaintiff's personal estate will survive to the benefit of his or her personal representatives.

The principle also exists to protect the estate and executors from liability for strictly personal acts of the deceased, such as charges for fraud.

Origins of the maxim

It has been argued by academics [Goudy "Two Ancient Brocards" in "Essays in Legal History" Vinogradoff (ed.) and Winfield "Textbook of the Law of Tort" 2nd edn. p.201] and acknowledged by the Courtscf. the remarks of Viscount Simon in "Stewart v. London, Midland and Scottish Railway Co. 1943 SC (HL) 19 at 26"] that notwithstanding the Latinate form in which the proposition is expressed its origins are less antiquated. It has been described by one Lord Chancellor (Viscount Simon) as:

...not in fact the source from which a body of law has been deduced, but a confusing expression, framed in the solemnity of the Latin tongue, in which the effect of death upon certain personal torts was inaccurately generalised.
Early judicial discussions of the term can be found in "Pinchon's case" [(1611) 9 Rep. 86] and "Hambly v. Trott." [(1776) 1 Cowper 371]

References

See also

* List of Latin phrases


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • actio personalis moritur cum persona — a personal action dies with the person. Collins dictionary of law. W. J. Stewart. 2001 …   Law dictionary

  • actio personalis moritur cum persona — /skshiyow parsaneylas moratar kam parsowney/ A personal right of action dies with the person. The maxim was originally applied to almost every form of action, whether arising out of contract or tort, but the common law was modified by the Statute …   Black's law dictionary

  • actio personalis moritur cum persona — /skshiyow parsaneylas moratar kam parsowney/ A personal right of action dies with the person. The maxim was originally applied to almost every form of action, whether arising out of contract or tort, but the common law was modified by the Statute …   Black's law dictionary

  • Actio personalis moritur cum persona — A personal action dies with the person. 1 Am J2d, Abat & R § 51. Such principle of the common law is in modern times of little more than historical interest, since it has been abrogated by statute in most, if not all, American jurisdictions. 1 Am …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • Actio personalis quae oritur ex delicto moritur cum persona — A personal action which arises out of a tort dies with the person …   Ballentine's law dictionary

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  • action — ac·tion n [Latin actio legal proceeding, from agere to do, carry out, initiate legal proceedings] 1 a: a judicial proceeding for the enforcement or protection of a right, the redress or prevention of a wrong, or the punishment of a public offense …   Law dictionary

  • Adages juridiques — Jargon juridique Le jargon juridique est un pseudo langage propre aux représentants des professions gravitant autour du droit. Il s agit surtout d expressions, d adages en latin ainsi que des abréviations (pour ces dernières, voir l article… …   Wikipédia en Français

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