释义 |
no-right|ˈnəʊraɪt| [f. no a. + right n.1 7.] In Jurisprudence, an obligation not to prevent the exercise of a privilege.
1913W. N. Hohfeld in Yale Law Jrnl. XXIII. 32 As indicated in the above scheme of jural relations, a privilege is the opposite of a duty, and the correlative of a ‘no-right’. 1923― Fundamental Legal Conceptions i. 39 The correlative of X's right that Y shall not enter on the land is Y's duty not to enter; but the correlative of X's privilege of entering himself is manifestly Y's ‘no-right’ that X shall not enter. 1938M. Radin in Harvard Law Rev. LI. 1150 The phrase ‘no right’ was subjected to a great deal of critical and destructive comment. ‘A ‘no-right’’, one critic once declared, ‘might be an elephant.’ 1972W. A. Wilson in Juridical Rev. Aug. 162 The correlative of a liberty is a no-right. The jural opposite of a right is a no-right. |