COMPENSATIO CRIMINIS.
The compensation or set-off of one crime against another; for example,
in questions of divorce, where one party claims the divorce on the
ground of adultery of his or her companion, the latter may show that the
complainant has been guilty of the same offence, and having himself
violated the contract, he cannot complain of its violation on the other
side. This principle is incorporated in the codes of most civilized
nations. 1 Ought. Ord. per tit. 214; 1 Hagg. Consist. R. 144; 1 Hagg.
Eccl. R. 714; 2 Paige, 108; 2 Dev. & Batt. 64. See Condonation.
COMPENSATION,
chancery practice. The performance of tbat which a court of chancery
orders to be done on relieving a party who has broken a condition, which
is to place the opposite party in no worse situation than if the
condition had not been broken.
2.
Courts of equity will not relieve from the consequences of a broken
condition, unless compensation can be made to the opposite party. Fonb.
c. 6; s. 51 n. (k) Newl. Contr: 251, et. seq.
3.
When a simple mistake, not a fraud, affects a contract, but does not
change its essence, a court of equity will enforce it, upon making
compensation for the error, The principle upon wbich courts of equity
act," says Lord Chancellor Eldon, "is by all the authorities brought to
the true standard, that though the party had not a title at law, because
he had not strictly complied with the terms so as to entitle him to an
action, (as to time for instance,) yet if the time, though introduced,
as some time must be fixed, where something is to be done on one side,
as a consideration for something to be done on the other, is not the
essence of the contract; a material object, to which they looked in the
first conception of it, even though the lapse of time has not arisen
from accident, a court of equity will compel the execution of the
contract upon this ground, that one party is ready to perform, and that
the other ma, have performance in substance if he will permit it." 13
Ves. 287. See 10 Ves. 505; 13 Ves. 73, 81, 426; 6 Ves. 675; 1 Cox, 59.
COMPENSATION, contracts. A reward for services rendered.
COMPENSATION,
contracts, civil law. When two persons are equally indebted to each
other, there takes place a compensation between them, which extinguishes
both debts. Compensation is, therefore, a reciprocal liberation between
two persons who are creditors and debtors to each other, which
liberation takes place instead of payment, and prevents a circuity. Or
it may be more briefly defined as follows; compensatio est debiti et
crediti intter se contributio.
2.
Compeasation takes places, of course, by the more operation of law,
even unknown to the debtors the two debts are reciprocally extinguished,
as soon as they exist simultaneously, to the, amount of their
respective sums. Compensation takes place only between two debts, having
equally for their object a sum of money, or a certain quantity of
consumable things of one and the same kind, and which are equally
liquidated and demandable. Compensation takes place, whatever be the
cause of either of the debts, except in case, 1st. of a demand of
restitution of a tbing of which the owner has been unjustly deprived;
2d. of a demand of restitution of a deposit and a loan for use; 3d. of a
debt which has for its cause, aliments declared not liable to seizure.
Civil Code of. Louis. 2203 to 2208. Compensation is of three kinds: 1.
legal or by operation of law; 2. compensation by way of exception; and,
3. by reconvention. 8 L. R. 158; Dig. lib. 16, t. 2; Code, lib. 4, t.
31; Inst. lib. 4, t' 6, s. 30; Poth. Obl. partie. 3eme, ch. 4eme, n.
623; Burge on Sur., Book 2, c. 6, p. 181.
3.
Compensation very nearly resembles the set-off (q. v.) of the common
law. The principal difference is this, that a set-off, to have any
effect, must be pleaded; whereas compensation is effectual without any
such plea, only the balance is a debt. .2 Bouv. Inst. n. 1407.
COMPENSATION, crim. law; Compeusatio crimiuura, or recrimination (q. v.)
2.
In cases of suits for divorce on the ground of adultery, a compensation
of the crime hinders its being granted; that is, if the defendant
proves that the party has also committed adultery, the defendant is
absolved as to the matters charged in the libel of the plaintiff. Ought.
tit. 214, Pl. 1; Clarke's Prax. tit. 115; Shelf. on Mar. & Div.
439; 1 Hagg. Cons. R. 148. See Condonation; Divorce.
COMPENSATION, remedies. The damages recovered for an injury, or the violation of a contract.. See Damages.
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