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View synonyms for sui juris

sui juris

[ soo-ahy joor-is, soo-ee ]

adjective

, Law.
  1. capable of managing one's affairs or assuming legal responsibility.


sui juris

/ ˈsuːaɪ ˈdʒʊərɪs /

adjective

  1. usually postpositive law of full age and not under disability; legally competent to manage one's own affairs; independent
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of sui juris1

First recorded in 1605–15, sui juris is from Latin suī jūris “of one's own right”
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Word History and Origins

Origin of sui juris1

C17: from Latin, literally: of one's own right
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Example Sentences

As regards persons in private custody, e.g. persons not sui juris detained by those not entitled to their guardianship or lunatics, or persons kidnapped, habeas corpus ad subjiciendum seems not to have been the ordinary common law remedy.

No Roman patrician was ever imbued with a greater sense of the sui juris of the sacred rights with which "the city" had invested her.

In the years before the war, when the influx of patients from all parts made me independent of the favor or disfavor of my native city, I followed the rule of not treating anyone who was not sui juris, was not independent of all other persons in his essential relations of life.

For we never, in our natural experience, encounter an existing individual substance, or nature, or agent, that is not distinct, autonomous, independent, sui juris, and incommunicable in its mode of being and acting.

It may be that the complete individual nature is eo ipso and identically a “subsisting being” or “person,” that it is always independent, autonomous, sui juris, by the very fact that it is a complete individual nature, unless it is de facto assumed into the personality of a higher nature, so that in this intercommunication with the latter, in the unity of the latter's personality, it is not independent, autonomous, sui juris, but dependent, subordinate, and alterius juris.

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