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The court may set its own procedures and practices by Acts of Sederunt.
They were given a power to draft rules regarding any matters about which Acts of Sederunt may be made.
The Secretary shall minute the proceedings of each meeting such minutes to be produced, and read and passed at each sederunt.
Acts of Sederunt, like other legislation in the United Kingdom, are introduced by enacting formulae.
(9) The Court of Session may, by act of sederunt, make rules for the conduct of proceedings under this section.
Once the "sederunt" had been uttered with a kind of stubborn difficulty, the "principes" rose in the air with grand and seraphic calm.
The elaborate patterns of voice exchange in pieces like "Sederunt" prove that Perotin composed them as a whole, not by successively adding voices.
Civil procedure is generally regulated by Acts of Sederunt which are ordinances passed by the Court of Session.
Since its founding the Court of Session was given considerable scope to regulate its own affairs through Acts of Sederunt.
The decisions of the Lords of Council & Session, in the most important cases debate before them, with the Acts of Sederunt.
As also, an alphabetical compend of the decisions, with an index of the Acts of Sederunt, and the pursuers and defenders names.
The Court of Session 1988 has an exhaustive list of how the court may regulate procedure and allocate business via Acts of Sederunt.
The manner in which counsel is able to present oral argument is regulated by Act of Sederunt, with an early example prescribing syllogistic as opposed to rhetorical pleading.
Acts of Sederunt are used primarily to regulate civil procedure in the Court of Session and Sheriff Courts in Scotland.
The power to pass Acts of Sederunt was recently reconfirmed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom in the Court of Session Act 1988.
An Act of Sederunt or an Act of Adjournal made by the Court of Session is numbered as an SSI.
Act of Sederunt (literally Act of Session; with sederunt a term meaning a session or meeting of a court.)
The Court shared this power with the Parliament of Scotland until 1540 when it was given the exclusive power to pass Acts of Sederunt by c.93 of that year.
The abbot invited them to chant the "Sederunt": Sederunt principes et adversus me loquebantur, iniqui persecuti sunt me.
Scots Law was a notable exception in retaining much of its traditional terminology such as Act of Sederunt, sheriff-substitute, procurator fiscal, sasine, pursuer, interlocutor (court order) and messenger-at-arms.
Acts of Sederunt take effect as a form of secondary legislation as a Scottish Statutory Instrument but are only laid before the Scottish Parliament where required by statute.
The powers of Acts of Sederunt extended into primary legislation with the Lords of Session passing Acts which created judicial precedent without any case being subject to adjudication.
In the 19th century there were those who felt the power of the Court to pass Acts of Sederunt without Parliamentary approval was ultra vires (beyond the powers) of the Court.
Therefore, Robert Wallace and a meeting of the Country of Renfrew resolved that the power to make Acts of Sederunt should belong to Parliament alone, as they were legislative acts.
They held a sederunt, and were filled with tremulous joy, for, in spite of their familiarity with all the other worlds and cycles, they had a very human awe of things sent from ghostland.