Subreption

Subreption
Subreption
In canon law the concealment or suppression of statements or facts that according to law or usage should be expressed in an application or petition for a rescript

Catholic Encyclopedia. . 2006.

Subreption
    Subreption
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Subreption
    (Lat. subreptio).
    In canon law the concealment or suppression of statements or facts that according to law or usage should be expressed in an application or petition for a rescript. In its effects subreption is equivalent to obreption (q.v.), which consists in a positive allegation of what is false. Subreption may be intentional and malicious, or attributable solely to ignorance or inadvertence. It may affect the primary, substantial reason or motive of the grant, or constitute merely a secondary or impellent cause of the concession. For the effect of subreption on the validity of grants see Rescripts.
    Decretalia, I, 3, c. 20, De Rescriptis, and canonists generally.
    A.B. MEEHAN
    Transcribed by Shirle Hardesty

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company. . 1910.


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • subreption — [ sybrɛpsjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1341; lat. jurid. subreptio ♦ Dr. can. Le fait d obtenir une grâce, un privilège d une manière frauduleuse par la dissimulation de ce qui s y opposerait. ⇒SUBREPTION, subst. fém. A. DR. CANON., vx. Obtention d une grâce, d… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Subreption — is a concept in Roman law and, in this tradition, Canon law. In this context, obreption and subreption belong together. The Latin word for subreption is subreptio , the German is Erschleichung .In German philosophy, the concept was used by… …   Wikipedia

  • Subreption — Sub*rep tion, n. [L. subreptio, fr. subripere, subreptum, to snatch or take away secretly: cf. F. subreption. See {Surreptitious}.] The act of obtaining a favor by surprise, or by unfair representation through suppression or fraudulent… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • subreption — Subreption. sub. f. Ce qui rend des Lettres subreptices. Des moyens d obreption & de subreption …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • Subreption — (lat.), Erschleichung (s. d.), insbes. durch Angabe falscher Tatsachen (vgl. Obreption) …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Subreption — (lat.), Erschleichung; Subreptionsfehler, Fehler, der sich durch Unachtsamkeit einschleicht …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • subreption — I noun deception, deliberate misrepresentation, fabrication, false swearing, falsehood, falsification, guile, invention, lying, mendacity, misrepresentation, perjury, prevarication, untruth II index deceit, fraud, misstatement Burton s Legal… …   Law dictionary

  • subreption — [sub rep′shən] n. [L subreptio < subreptus, pp. of subripere, surripere, to take away secretly: see SURREPTITIOUS] 1. deliberate concealment or misrepresentation of facts so as to gain some benefit or advantage 2. an erroneous inference or… …   English World dictionary

  • Subreption — Erschleichung oder Subreption von lateinisch „subreptio“ ist ein Begriff des römischen Rechts, das in Europa als gemeines Recht bis ins 19. Jahrhundert galt. Im heutigen Recht ist der Begriff vor allem erhalten als Erschleichen von Leistungen.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • subreption — (su brè psion ; en vers, de quatre syllabes) s. f. Surprise faite à un supérieur ; grâce obtenue sur un faux exposé. •   Pour fermer la voie de la subreption, PATRU Plaidoyers, 15.    Moyens d obreption et de subreption, moyens par lesquels on… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

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