Dominium Explained

Latin: Dominium means "dominion; control; ownership".

Use in legal Latin

Latin: Dominium is used in some phrases and maxims in legal Latin:

In general, "utilization" of resources on the property is subject to a reasonableness test. A life tenant with dominium directum of an estate may make reasonable use of resources, which means roughly renewable or trivial usage: the culling of firewood in the midst of an expansive forest, or the extraction of coal sufficient for home use from a fecund mine. Any commercialization (e.g. selling rights to the coal shaft) or large-scale exploitation (raising extensive erections on the estate using the timber resources) will implicate the dominium utile reserved to the holder in reversion and be subject to legal action at common law.

Use in Catholic theology

See main article: Dominion (political theory). The concept of Latin: dominium was central to John Wyclif's political-theory concepts of divine and civil dominion.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Fairfax's Devisee v Hunter's Lessee (US) 7 Cranch 603, 618, 3 L Ed 453, 458.
  2. Gilmer v Lime Point, 18 Cal 229, 251.
  3. Book: Erskine. John. Ivory. James. An Institute of the Law of Scotland. 1824. Bell & Bradfute. 220 . Latin: dominium non potest esse in pendenti
    "Property cannot float in an uncertainty," but must, at every period of time, be vested in some one person or another.
    .