CONCLUSION,
practice. Making the last argument or address to the court or jury. The
party on whom the onus probandi is cast, in general has the conclusion.
CONCLUSION,
remedies. An estoppel; a bar; the act of a man by which he has
confessed a matter or thing which he can no longer deny; as, for
example, the sheriff is concluded by his return to a writ, and
therefore, if upon a capias he return cepi corpus, he cannot afterwards
show that he did not arrest the defendant, but is concluded by his
return. Vide Plowd. 276, b; 3 Tho. Co. Litt. 600.
CONCLUSION TO THE COUNTRY, pleading. The tender of. an issue to be tried by a jury is called the conclusion to the country.
2.
This conclusion is in the following words, when the issue is tendered
by the defendant: " And of this the said C D puts himself upon the
country." When it is tendered by the plaintiff, the formula is as
follows: " And this the said A B prays may be inquired of by the
country." It held, however, that there is no material difference between
these two modes of expression, and that, if ponit se, be substituted
for petit quod inquiratur, or vice versa, the mistake is unimportant. 10
Mod. 166.
3.
When there is an affirmative on one side, and a negative on the other,
or vice versa, the conclusion should be to the country. T. Raym. 98;
Carth. 87; 2 Saund. 189; 2 Burr. 1022. So it is, though the affirmative
and negative be not in express words, but only tantamount thereto. Co.
Litt. 126, a; Yelv. 137; 1 Saund. 103; 1 Chit. Pl. 592; Com. Dig.
Pleader, E 32.
CONCLUSIVE.
What puts an end to a thing. A conclusive presumption of law, is one
which cannot be contradicted even by direct and positive proof. Take,
for example, the presumption that an infant is incapable of judging
whether it is or is not against his interest; When infancy is pleaded
and proved, the plaintiff cannot show that the defendant was within one
day of being of age when the contract was made, and perfectly competent
to make a contract. 3 Bouv. Inst. n. 3061.
CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE.
That which cannot be contradicted by any other evidence,; for example, a
record, unless impeached for fraud, is conclusive evidence between the
parties. 3 Bouv. Inst. n. 3061-62.
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