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DECLARATION (from Lat. declarare, to ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 914 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DECLARATION (from
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Lat. declarare, to make fully clear, clams)
  , formerly, in an
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action at
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English law, the first step in pleading—the precise statement of the
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matter in respect of which the
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plaintiff sued . It was divided into
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counts, in each of which a specific cause of action was alleged, in wide and general terms, and the same acts or omissions might be stated in several counts as different causes of actions . Under the
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system of pleading established by the Judicature Act 1875, the declaration has been superseded by a statement of claim setting forth the facts on which the plaintiff relies . Declarations are now in use only in the mayor's court of
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London and certain
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local courts of record, and in those of the
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United States and the
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British colonies in which the
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Common Law system of pleading survives . In the United States a declaration is termed a " complaint," which is the first pleading in an action . It is divided into parts,—the title of the court and
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term; the venue or county in which the facts are alleged to have occurred; the commencement, which contains a statement of the names of the parties and the character in which they appear; the statement of the cause of action; and the conclusion or claim for
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relief . (See PLEADING.) The term is also used in other English legal connexions; e.g. the Declaration of Insolvency which, when filed in the Bankruptcy Court by any person unable to pay his debts, amounts to an act of bankruptcy (see BANKRUPTCY); the Declaration of Title, for which, when a person apprehends an invasion of his title to
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land, he may, by the Declaration of Title Act 1862, petition the Court of
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Chancery (see LAND
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REGISTRATION); or the . Declaration of
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Trust, whereby a person acknowledges that
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property, the title of which he holds, belongs to another, for whose use he holds it; by the
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Statute of Frauds, declarations of trust of land must be evidenced in writing and signed by the party declaring the trust . (See
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TRUSTS.) By the Statutory Declarations Act 1835 (which was an act to make provision for the abolition of unnecessary oaths, and to repeal a previous act of the same session on the same subject), various cases were specified in which a solemn declaration was, or might be, substituted for an affidavit . In nearly all civilized countries an affirmation is now permitted to those who
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object to take an oath or upon whose conscience an oath is not binding . (See AFFIDAVIT; OATH.) An exceptional position in law is accorded to a Dying or
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Death-bed Declaration . As a general
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rule, hearsay evidence is excluded on a criminal charge, but where the charge is one of homicide it is the practice to admit dying declarations of the deceased with respect to the cause of his death .

But before such declarations can be admitted in evidence against a prisoner, it must be proved that the deceased when making the declaration had given up all

hope of recovery . Unworn declarations as to
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family matters, e.g. as to
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pedigree, may also be admitted as evidence, as well as declarations made by deceased persons in the course of their duty .

End of Article: DECLARATION (from Lat. declarare, to make fully clear, clams)
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