释义 |
‖ venire Law.|vɪˈnaɪəriː| [Ellipt. for next.] 1. = next 1.
1665Ever Tryals per Pais iii. 31 Therefore where the Sheriff ought not to retorn the Venire, he cannot retorn the Tales. 1676Office Clerk Assize 82 In the mean time doth the Clerk of the Peace file the Venire, and the pannel with the Indictment. 1722Beverley Hist. Virginia iv. vi. 223 A Writ of Venire issues in such Cases, to summon six of the nearest Neighbours to the Criminal. 1771E. Long in Hone Every-day Bk. (1826) II. 200 You must have a venire for a jury. 1821Archbold Digest Law Pleading & Evidence 415 Stating the names, &c. of the knights and recognitors, as in the venire. 1825Act 6 Geo. IV, c. 50 §16 marg., If Plaintiff sue forth a Venire, etc. in order to Trial, and proceed not, he may afterwards sue forth another Venire, etc. and try at any subsequent Assizes. b. venire de novo, = next 1 b.
1797Tomlins Jacob's Law Dict. s.v. Venire Facias de novo, The following seem to be the cases in which a Venire de Novo is grantable. 1885Law Rep. 10 App. Cas. 414 Without some such power [of ascertaining what the circumstances were] no judgment, except a venire de novo, could be given. c. venire man, one summoned to serve on a jury under a writ of Venire facias, a juryman. U.S.
1780Virginia Statutes at Large X. 489 An act for regulating tobacco fees, and fixing the allowance to sheriffs, witnesses, and venire-men. 1895Weekly Examiner (San Francisco) 5 Sept. 2/1 Sheriff Whelan's deputies had apparently summoned most all of the veniremen from the foreign sections of the city. †2. = next 2. Obs.
1763Ld. Hardwicke in Harris Life (1847) III. 344, I believe he came in upon the venire or capias, & put in bail. 1769[see venire facias 2]. †3. The place from which the jurors were to be summoned or in which the cause was to be tried; = venue 5. Obs.
1682Luttrell Brief Rel. (1857) I. 185 Mr. Graham haveing moved once or twice the court of kings bench that the venire might be laid in another county. 1682Lond. Gaz. No. 1720/7 This day the great Case between the Earl of Shaftsbury and Mr. Cradock came on in the Kings-Bench about changing the Venire out of London. |