CERTIFICATE,
practice. A writing made in any court, and properly authenticated, to
give notice to another court of anything done therein; or it is a
writing by which an officer or other person bears testimony that a fact
has or has not taken place.
2.
There are two kinds of certificates; those required by the law, and
those which are merely voluntary. Of the first kind are certificates
given to an insolvent of his discharge, and those given to aliens, that
they have been naturalized. Voluntary certificates are those which are
not required by law, but which are given of the mere motion of the
party. The former are evidence of the facts therein mentioned, while the
latter are not entitled to any credit, because the factscertified, may
be proved in the usual way under the solemnity of an oath or
affirmation. 2 Com. Dig. 306; Ayl. Parerg. 157; Greenl. Ev. 498.
CERTIFICATE, JUDGE'S,
English practice. The judge who tries the cause is authorized by
several statutes in certain cases to certify, so as to decide when the
party or parties shall or shall not be entitled to costs. It is of great
importance in many cases, that these certificates should be obtained at
the time of trial. See 3 Camp. R. 316; 5 B. & A. 796; Tidd's Pr.
879; 3 Ch. Pr. 458, 486.
2.
The Lord Chancellor often requires the opinion of the judges upon a
question of law; to obtain this, a case is trained, containing the
admissions on both sides, and upon these the legal question is stated;
the case is then submitted to the judges, who, after hearing counsel,
transmit to the chancellor their opinion. This opinion, signed by the
judges of the court, is called their certificate. See 3 Bl. Com. 453.
CERTIFICATE, ATTORNEY'S,
Practice, English law. By statute 37 Geo. III., c. 90, s. 26, 28,
attorneys are required to deliver to the commissioners of stamp duties, a
paper or note-in writing, containing the name and usual place of
residence of such person, and thereupon, on paying certain duties, such
person is entitled to a certificate attesting the payment of such
duties, which must be renewed yearly. And by the 30th section, an
attorney is liable to the penalty of fifty pounds for practising
without.
CERTIFICATION or CERTIFICATE OF ASSISE.
A term used in the old English law, applicable to a writ granted for
the reexamination or re-trial of a matter passed by assise before
justices. F. N. B. 181 3 Bl. Com. 389. The summary motion for a new
trial has entirely superseded the use of this writ, which was one of the
means devised by the judges to prevent a resort to the remedy by
attaint for a wrong verdict.
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