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In Common-Law Pleading or Code Pleading, the initial statements made by a plaintiff that set forth a Cause of Action to commence a civil lawsuit; the different points of a plaintiff's declaration, each of which constitute a basis for relief. In Criminal Procedure, one of several parts or charges of an indictment, each accusing the defendant of a different offense. The term count has been replaced by the word complaint in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and many state codes of civil procedure. Sometimes count is used to denote the numbered paragraphs of a complaint, each of which sets out an essential element of the claim. Federal and state rules of criminal procedure govern the standards that a criminal count must satisfy in federal and state criminal matters. count n. each separate statement in a complaint which states a cause of action which, standing alone, would give rise to a lawsuit), or each separate charge in a criminal action. For example, the complaint in a civil (non-criminal) lawsuit might state: First Count (or cause of action) for negligence, and then state the detailed allegations; Second Count for breach of contract, Third Count for debt, and so forth. In a criminal case each count would be a statement of a different alleged crime. There are also so-called common counts which cover various types of debt. (See: common counts) COUNT, pleading. This word, derived from the French conte, a narrative, is
in our old law books used synonymously with declaration but practice has
introduced the following distinction: when the plaintiff's complaint
embraces only a single cause of action, and he makes only one statement of
it, that statement is called, indifferently, a declaration or count; though
the former is the more usual term.
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18 year old without license wrecked car, liability 18 yr. Old brother accused of child molestation 19 year old daughter in jail for bringing marijuana into the jail 28% disabled at work accident 3rd degree sexual conduct A A communi observantia non est recedendum a count A Fortiori A l'impossible nul n'est tenu A mensa et thoro A Posteriori A prendre A Priori a priori assumption |
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