Nec vi nec clam nec precario Quick reference
Guide to Latin in International Law (2 ed.)
...Nec vi nec clam nec precario . Nāk wē nāk klam nāk prāka´rēō . nek vī nek klâm nek preka´rēō. adv . “Neither by force, nor secretly, nor by entreaty.” An abbreviated form of Possessio nec vi nec clam nec precario...
nec clam, nec vi, nec precario Quick reference
A Dictionary of Law (10 ed.)
... clam, nec vi, nec precario [Latin: neither secretly, nor by force, nor with permission] The presumption in law that long enjoyment of land allows for the presumption that the rights to that same land have a legal and legitimate...
nec clam, nec vi, nec precario
Possessio nec vinec clam nec precario Quick reference
Guide to Latin in International Law (2 ed.)
...Possessio nec vinec clam nec precario . pōssās´sēō nākwē nāk klam nākprāka´rēō . puze´šō nek vī, nek klâm, nek preke´rēō. n . “Possession neither by force, nor secretly, nor by entreaty.” (1) Adverse possession of property. (2) Peaceful occupation of territory obtained in a lawful manner without the use of force, fraud, or by gratuitous revocable loan by the owner or previous possessor. See also Uti possidetis ( iuris ) ....
Uti possidetis (iuris) Quick reference
Guide to Latin in International Law (2 ed.)
...the party in possession of disputed land or buildings who has not obtained such possession by force, fraud, or gratuitous revocable loan ( nec vi nec clam nec precario ) to remain in such possession without interference until the dispute over possession is resolved by the court. Compare with Uti possidetis, ita possideatis . Contrast with Uti possidetis de facto . See also Nec vi nec clam nec precario and Possessio longi temporis...
Property Reference library
The Oxford International Encyclopedia of Legal History
...had been forcibly ejected from a property; lit. whence by force) and its variant de vi armata (where armed force had been used to eject the possessor). Others included the interdict de precario to aid the tenant-at-will and the interdict de clandestina possessione (Jolowicz, p. 275). Early Empire. The “classical” period, when Roman law reached new levels of intellectual sophistication, was one of legal consolidation—the praetorian edict was formally solidified in 130 c.e. during the reign of the emperor Hadrian—and refinement (through juristic...