plea 音標拼音: [pl'i]
n . 懇求,辯解,抗辯,請愿,托詞
懇求,辯解,抗辯,請願,托詞
plea n 1 :
a humble request for help from someone in authority [
synonym :
{
supplication }, {
plea }]
2 : (
law )
a defendant '
s answer by a factual matter (
as distinguished from a demurrer )
3 :
an answer indicating why a suit should be dismissed Plea \
Plea \,
n . [
OE .
plee ,
plai ,
plait ,
fr .
OF .
plait ,
plaid ,
plet ,
LL .
placitum judgment ,
decision ,
assembly ,
court ,
fr .
L .
placitum that which is pleasing ,
an opinion ,
sentiment ,
from placere to please .
See {
Please },
and cf . {
Placit },
{
Plead }.]
1 . (
Law )
That which is alleged by a party in support of his cause ;
in a stricter sense ,
an allegation of fact in a cause ,
as distinguished from a demurrer ;
in a still more limited sense ,
and in modern practice ,
the defendant '
s answer to the plaintiff '
s declaration and demand .
That which the plaintiff alleges in his declaration is answered and repelled or justified by the defendant '
s plea .
In chancery practice ,
a plea is a special answer showing or relying upon one or more things as a cause why the suit should be either dismissed ,
delayed ,
or barred .
In criminal practice ,
the plea is the defendant '
s formal answer to the indictment or information presented against him .
[
1913 Webster ]
2 . (
Law )
A cause in court ;
a lawsuit ;
as ,
the Court of Common Pleas .
See under {
Common }.
[
1913 Webster ]
The Supreme Judicial Court shall have cognizance of pleas real ,
personal ,
and mixed . --
Laws of Massachusetts .
[
1913 Webster ]
3 .
That which is alleged or pleaded ,
in defense or in justification ;
an excuse ;
an apology . "
Necessity ,
the tyrant '
s plea ." --
Milton .
[
1913 Webster ]
No plea must serve ; '
t is cruelty to spare .
--
Denham .
[
1913 Webster ]
4 .
An urgent prayer or entreaty .
[
1913 Webster ]
{
Pleas of the crown } (
Eng .
Law ),
criminal actions .
[
1913 Webster ]
66 Moby Thesaurus words for "
plea ":
adjuration ,
alibi ,
answer ,
apology ,
appeal ,
application ,
argument ,
argumentum ,
beseechment ,
bid ,
call ,
case ,
clamor ,
cons ,
consideration ,
counterstatement ,
cry ,
defence ,
defense ,
demurrer ,
denial ,
elenchus ,
entreaty ,
exception ,
excuse ,
explanation ,
extenuation ,
ignoratio elenchi ,
imploration ,
imploring ,
imprecation ,
invocation ,
invocatory plea ,
justification ,
mitigation ,
objection ,
obsecration ,
obtestation ,
out ,
overture ,
palliation ,
petition ,
plaidoyer ,
pleading ,
pleadings ,
prayer ,
pretext ,
pros ,
pros and cons ,
reason ,
rebuttal ,
refutation ,
reply ,
request ,
response ,
right ,
riposte ,
rogation ,
solicitation ,
special demurrer ,
special pleading ,
statement of defense ,
suit ,
supplication ,
talking point ,
vindication PLEA ,
practice .
The defendant '
s answer by matter of fact ,
to the plaintiff '
s declaration .
2 .
It is distinguished from a demurrer ,
which opposes matter of law to the declaration .
Steph .
Pl .
62 .
3 .
Pleas are divided into plea dilatory and peremptory ;
and this is the most general division to which they are subject .
4 .
Subordinate to this is another division ;
they are either to the jurisdiction of the court ,
in suspension of the action ;
in abatement of the writ ;
or ,
in bar of the action ;
the first three of which belong to the dilatory class ,
the last is of the peremptory kind .
Steph .
Pl .
63 ;
1 Chit .
Pl .
425 ;
Lawes ,
Pl .
36 .
5 .
The law has prescribed and settled the order of pleading ,
which the defendant is to pursue ,
to wit ;
1st .
To the jurisdiction of the court .
2d .
To the disability , &
c .
of the person .
1st .
Of the plaintiff .
2d .
Of the defendant .
3d .
To the count or declaration .
4th .
To the writ .
1st .
To the form of the writ ;
first ,
Matter apparent on the face of it ,
secondly ,
Matter dehors .
2d .
To the action of the writ .
5th .
To the action itself in bar .
6 .
This is said to be the natural order of pleading ,
because each subsequent ,
plea admits that there is no foundation for the former .
Such is the English law .
1 Ch .
Plead .
425 .
The rule is different with regard to the plea of jurisdiction in the courts of the United States and those of Pennsylvania .
1 .
Binn .
138 ;
ld .
219 ;
2 Dall .
368 ;
3 Dall .
19 ;
10 S . &
R .
229 .
7 .-
2 .
Plea ,
in its ancient sense ,
means suit or action ,
and it is sometimes still used in that sense ;
for example ,
A B was summoned to answer C D of a plea that he render , &
c .
Steph .
Pl .
38 ,
39 ,
u .
9 ;
Warr .
Law Studies ,
272 ,
note n .
8 .-
3 .
This variable word ,
to plead ,
has still another and more popular use ,
importing forensic argument in a cause ,
but it is not so employed by the profession .
Steph .
Pl .
App .
note 1 .
9 .
There are various sorts of pleas ,
the principal of which are given below .
10 .
Plea in abatement ,
is when ,
for any default ,
the defendant prays that the writ or plaint do abate ,
that is ,
cease against him for that time .
Com .
Dig .
Abatement ,
B .
11 .
Hence it may be observed ,
1st .
That the defendant may plead in Abatement for faults apparent on the writ or plaint itself ,
or for such as are shown dehors ,
or out of the writ or plaint .
2d .
That a plea in ,
abatement is never perpetual ,
but only a temporary plea ,
in form at least ,
and if the cause revived ,
the plaintiff may sue again .
12 .
If the defendant plead a plea in abatement ,
in his plea ,
he ought generally to give a better writ to the plaintiff ,
that is ,
show him what other and better writ can be adopted ;
Com .
Dig .
Abatement ,
I 1 ;
but if the plea go to the matter and substance of the writ , &
c .,
he need not give the plaintiff another writ .
Nor need he do so when the plea avoids the whole cause of the action .
Id .
I 2 .
13 .
Pleas in abatement are divided into those relating ,
first ,
to the disability of the plaintiff or defendant ;
secondly ,
to the count or declaration ;
thirdly ,
to the writ .
1 Chit .
Pl .
435 .
14 .-
1 .
Plea in abatement to the person of the plaintiff .
Pleas of this kind are either that the plaintiff is not in existence ,
being only a fictitious person ,
or dead ;
or else ,
that being in existence ,
he is under some disability to bring or maintain the action ,
as by being an alien enemy ;
Com .
Dig .
Abatement ,
E 4 Bac .
Abr .
Abatement ,
B 3 ;
1 Chit .
Pl .
436 ;
or the plaintiff is a married woman ,
and she sues alone .
See 3 T .
R .
631 ;
6 T .
R .
265 .
15 .
Plea in abatement to the person of the defendant .
These pleas are coverture ,
and ,
in the English law ,
infancy ,
when the parol shall demur .
When a feme covert is sued ,
and the objection is merely that the husband ought to have been sued jointly with her ;
as when ,
since entering into the contract ,
or committing the tort ,
she has married ;
she must ,
when sued alone ,
plead her coverture in abatement ,
and aver that her husband is living .
3 T .
R .
627 ;
1 Chit .
Pl .
437 ,
8 .
16 .-
2 .
Plea in abatement to the count .
Pleas of this kind are for some uncertainty ,
repugnancy ,
or want of form ,
not appearing on the face of the writ itself ,
but apparent from the recital of it in the declaration only ;
or else for some variance between the writ and declaration .
But it was always necessary to obtain oyer of the writ before the pleading of these pleas ;
and since oyer cannot now be had of the original writ for the purpose of pleading them ,
it seems that they can no longer be pleaded .
See Oyer .
17 .
Plea in abatement to the form of the writ .
Such pleas are for some apparent uncertainty ,
repugnancy ,
or want of form ,
variance from the record ,
specialty , &
c .,
mentioned therein ,
or misnomer of the plaintiff or defendant .
Lawes '
Civ .
Pl .
106 ;
1 Chit .
Pl .
440 .
18 .
Plea in abatement to the action of the writ .
Pleas of this kind are pleaded when the action is misconceived ,
or was prematurely commenced before the cause of action arose ;
or when there is another action depending for the same cause .
Tidd '
s Pr .
579 .
But as these matters are ground for demurrer or nonsuit ,
it is now very unusual to plead them in abatement .
See 2 Saund .
210 ,
a .
19 .
Plea in avoidance ,
is one which confesses the matters contained in the declaration ,
and avoids the effect of them ,
by some new matter which shows that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain his action .
For example ,
the plea may admit the contract declared upon ,
and show that it was void or voidable ,
because of the inability of one of the parties to make it ,
on account of coverture ,
infancy ,
or the like .
Lawes ,
Pl .
122 .
20 .
Plea in bar ,
is one that denies that the plaintiff has any cause of action .
1 Ch .
Pl .
459 Co .
Litt .
303 b ;
6 Co .
7 .
Or it is one which shows some ground for barring or defeating the action ;
and makes prayer to that effect ,
Steph .
Pl .
70 ;
Britton ,
92 .
See Bar .
21 .
A plea in bar is ,
therefore ,
distinguished from all pleas of the dilatory class ,
as impugning the right of the action altogether ,
instead of merely tending to divert the proceedings to another jurisdiction ,
or suspend them ,
or abate the particular writ .
It is in short a substantial and conclusive answer to the action .
It follows ,
from this property ,
that in general ,
it must either deny all ,
or some essential part of the averments of fact in the declaration ;
or ,
admitting them to be true ,
allege new facts ,
which obviate and repel their legal effect .
In the first case the defendant is said ,
in the language of pleading ,
to traverse the matter of the declaration ;
in the latter ,
to confess and avoid it .
Pleas in bar are consequently divided into pleas by way of traverse ,
and pleas by way of confession and avoidance .
Steph .
Pl .
70 ,
71 .
22 .
Pleas in bar are ,
also divided into general or special .
General pleas in bar deny or take issue either upon the whole or part of the declaration ,
or contain some new matter which is relied upon by the defendant in his defence .
Lawes Pl .
110 .
23 .
Special pleas in bar are very various ,
according to the circumstances of the defendant '
s case ;
as ,
in personal actions ,
the defendant may plead any special matter in denial ,
avoidance ,
discharge ,
excuse ,
or justification of the matter alleged in the declaration ,
which destroys or bars the plaintiff '
s action ;
or he may plead any matter which estops ,
or precludes him from averring or insisting on any matter relied upon by the plaintiff in his declaration .
The latter sort of pleas are called pleas in estoppel .
In real actions ,
the tenant may plead any matter which destroys and bars the demandant '
s title ;
as ,
a general release .
Id .
115 ,
116 .
24 .
The general qualities of a plea in bar are ,
1 .
That it be adapted to the nature and form of the action ,
and also conformable to the count .
Co .
Litt .
303 ,
a 285 ,
b ;
Bac .
Abr .
Pleas ,
I ;
1 Roll .
Rep .
216 .
2 .
That it answers all it assumes to answer ,
and no more .
Co .
Litt .
303 a ;
Com .
Dig .
Pleader ,
E 1 ,
36 ;
1 Saund .
28 ,
n .
1 ,
2 ,
3 ;
2 Bos . &
Pull .
427 ;
3 Bos . &
Pull .
174 .
3 .
In the case of a special plea ,
that it confess and admit the fact .
3 T .
R .
298 ;
1 Salk .
394 ;
Carth .
380 ;
1 Saund .
28 ,
n .
and 14 u .
3 10 Johns .
R .
289 .
4 .
That it be single .
Co .
Litt .
304 ;
Bac .
Ab .
Pleas ,
2 Saund .
K ,
1 ,
2 ;
Com Dig .
Plead .
E 2 ;
49 ,
50 ;
Plowd .
Com .
140 ,
d .
5 .
That it be certain .
Com .
Dig .
Pleader ,
E 5 ,
7 ,
8 ,
9 ,
10 ,
11 ;
C 41 ;
this Dict .
Certainty ;
Pleading .
6 .
It must be direct ,
positive ,
and not argumentative .
See 6 Cranch ,
126 ;
9 Johns .
It .
313 .
7 .
It must be capable of trial .
8 .
It must be true and capable of proof .
See Plea ,
sham .
25 .
The parts of a plea in bar may be considered with reference to ,
1 .
The title of the court in which it is pleaded .
2 .
The title of the term .
3 .
The names of the parties in the margin .
These ,
however ,
do not constitute any part of the plea .
The surnames only are usually inserted ,
and that of the defendant precedes the plaintiff '
s ;
as , "
Roeats .
Doe ."
4 .
The commencement which includes the statement of ,
1 .
The name of the defendant ;
2 .
The appearance ;
3 .
The defence ;
see Defence ;
4 .
The actio non ;
see Actio non .
5 .
The body ,
which may contain ,
1 .
The inducement ;
2 .
The protestation ;
3 .
Ground of defence 4 .
Qua est eadem ;
5 .
The traverse .
6 .
The conclusion .
26 .
Dilatory pleas are such as delay the plaintiff '
s remedy ,
by questioning ,
not the cause of action ,
but the propriety of the suit ,
or the mode in which the remedy is sought .
27 .
Dilatory pleas are divided by Sir William Blackstone ,
into three kinds :
1 .
Pleas to the jurisdiction of the court ;
as ,
that the cause of action arose out of the limits of the jurisdiction of the court ,
when the action is local .
2 .
Pleas to the disability of the plaintiff ,
or ,
as they are usually termed ,
to '
the person of the plaintiff ;
as ,
that he is an alien enemy .
3 .
Pleas in abatement of the writ ,
or count ;
these are founded upon some defect or mistake ,
either in the writ itself ;
as ,
that the defendant is misnamed in it ,
or the like ;
or in the mode in which the count pursues it ;
as ,
that there is some variance or repugnancy between the count and writ ;
in which case ,
the fault in the count furnishes a cause for abating the writ .
2 Bl .
Com .
301 Com .
Dig .
Abatement ,
G 1 ,
8 ;
Id .
Pleader ,
C 14 ,
15 ;
Bac .
Ab .
Pleas ,
F 7 .
28 .
All dilatory pleas are sometimes called pleas in abatement ,
as contradistinguished to pleas to the action ;
this is perhaps not strictly proper ,
because ,
though all pleas in abatement are dilatory pleas ,
yet all dilatory pleas are not pleas in abatement .
Gould on Pl .
ch .
2 ,
Sec .
35 ;
vide 1 Chit .
PI ,
ch .
6 ;
Bac .
Ab .
Abatement ,
0 ;
1 Mass 358 ;
1 John .
Cas .
101 .
2 .
A plea in discharge ,
as distinguish ed from a plea in avoidance ,
is one which admits the demand ,
and instead of avoiding the payment or satisfaction of it ,
shows that it has been discharged by some matter of fact .
Such are pleas of payment ,
release ,
and the like .
30 .
A plea in excuse ,
is one which admits the demand or complaint stated in the declaration ,
but excuses the non -
compliance of the plaintiff '
s claim ,
or the commission of the act of which he complains ,
on account of the defendant having done all in his power to satisfy the former ,
or not having teen the culpable author of the latter .
A plea of tender is an example of the former ,
and a plea of son assault demesne ,
an instance of the latter .
31 .
A foreign plea is one which takes the cause out of the court where it is pleaded ,
by showing a want of jurisdiction in that court .
2 Lill .
Pr .
Beg .
374 ;
Carth .
402 .
See the form of the plea in Lill .
Ent .
475 .
32 .
A plea of justification is one in which the defendant professes purposely to have done the acts which are the subject of the plaintiff '
s suit ,
in order to exercise that right which he considers he might in point of law exercise ,
and in the exercise of which he conceives himself not merely excused ,
but justified .
33 .
A plea puis darrein continuance .
Under the ancient law ,
there were continuances ,
i .
e .
adjournments of the proceedings for certain purposes ,
from one day or one term to another ;
and ,
in such cases ,
there was an entry made on the record ,
expressing the ground of the adjournment ,
and appointing the parties to reappear at a given day .
34 .
In the interval between such continuance and the day appointed ,
the parties were of course out of court ,
and consequently not in a situation to plead .
But it sometimes happened ,
that after a plea had been pleaded ,
and while the parties were out of court ,
in consequence of such continuance ,
a new matter of defence arose ,
which did not exist ,
and which the defendant had consequently no opportunity to plead ,
before the last continuance .
This new defence he was therefore entitled ,
at the day given for his reappearance ,
to plead as a matter that had happened after the last continuance ,
puis darrein continuance .
In the same cases that occasioned a continuance in the ancient common law ,
but in no other ,
a continuance shall take place .
At the time indeed ,
when the pleadings are filed and delivered ,
no record exists ,
and there is ,
therefore ,
no entry at that time ,
made on the record ,
of the award of a continuance ;
but the parties are ,
from the day when ,
by the ancient practice ,
a continuance would have been entered ,
supposed to be out of court ,
and the pleading is suspended ,
till the day arrives to which ,
by the ancient ,
practice ,
the continuance would extend .
At that day ,
the defendant is entitled ,
if any new matter of defence has arisen in the interval ,
to plead it according to the ancient plan ,
puis darrein continuance .
35 .
A plea puis darrein continuance is not a departure from ,
but is a waiver of the first plea ,
and is always headed by way of substitution for it ,
on which no proceeding is afterwards had .
1 Salk .
178 ;
2 Stran .
1195 Hob .
81 ;
4 Serg . &
Rawle ,
239 .
Great certainty is requisite in pleas of this description .
Doct .
Pl .
297 ;
Yelv .
141 ;
Cro .
Jac .
261 ;
Freem .
112 ;
2 Lutw .
1143 ;
2 Salk .
519 ;
2 Wils .
139 ;
Co .
Entr .
517 b .
It is not sufficient to say generally that after the last continuance such a thing happened ,
but the day of the continuance must be shown ,
and also the time and place must be alleged where the matter of defence arose .
Id .
ibid .;
Bull .
N .
P .
309 .
36 .
Pleas puis darrein continuance are either in bar or abatement ;
Com .
Dig .
Abatement ,
I 24 ;
and are followed ,
like other pleas ,
by a replication and other pleadings ,
till issue is attained upon them such pleas must be verified on oath before they are allowed .
2 Smith '
s R .
396 ;
Freem .
352 ;
1 Strange ,
493 .
37 .
A sham plea is one which is known to the pleader to be false ,
and is entered for the purpose of delay .
There are certain pleas of this kind ,
which ,
in consequence of their having been long and frequently used in practice ,
have obtained toleration from the courts ;
and ,
though discouraged ,
are tacitly allowed ;
as ,
for example ,
the common plea of judgment recovered ,
that is ,
that judgment has been already recovered by the plaintiff ,
for the same cause of action .
Steph .
on Pleading ,
444 ,
445 ;
1 Chit .
Pl .
505 ,
506 .
38 .
Plea in suspension of the action .
Such a plea is one which shows some ground for not proceeding in the suit at the present period ,
and prays that the pleading may be stayed ,
until that ground be removed .
The number of these pleas is small .
Among them is that which is founded on the nonage of the parties ,
and termed parol demurrer .
Stephen on Pleading ,
64 .
See ,
generally ,
Bac .
Abr .
Pleas ,
Q ;
Com .
Dig .
Abatement ,
I 24 ,
34 ;
Doct ,
Pl .
297 ;
Bull .
N .
P .
309 ;
Lawes Civ .
Pl .
173 ;
1 Chit .
Pl .
634 ,;
Steph .
Pl .
81 ;
Bouv .
Inst .
Index .
PLEA ,
chancery practice . "
A plea ,"
says Lord Bacon ,
speaking of proceedings in courts of equity , "
is a foreign matter to discharge or stay the suit ."
Ord .
Chan . (
ed .
Beam .)
p .
26 .
Lord Redesdale defines it to be "
a special answer showing or relying upon one or more things as a cause why the suit should be either dismissed ,
delayed or barred ."
Mitf .
Tr .
Ch .
177 ;
see Coop .
Eq .
Pl .
223 ;
Beames '
Pl .
Eq .
1 .
A plea is a special answer to a bill ,
and differs in this from an answer in the common form ,
as it demands the judgment of the court in the first instance ,
whether the matter urged by it does not debar the plaintiff from his title to that answer which the bill requires .
2 Sch . &
Lef .
721 .
2 .
Pleas are of three sorts :
1 .
To the jurisdiction of the court .
2 .
To the person of the plaintiff .
3 .
In bar of the plaintiff '
s suit .
Blake '
s Ch .
Pr .
112 .
See ,
generally ,
Beames '
Elem .
of Pleas in Eq .;
Mitf .
Tr .
Cha .
oh .
2 ,
s .
2 ,
pt .
2 ;
Coop .
Eq .
Pl .
ch .
5 ;
2 Madd .
Ch .
Pr .
296 to 331 ;
Blake '
s Ch .
Pr .
112 to 114 ;
Bouv .
Inst .
Index ,
h .
t .
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