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Ex fida bona

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ex fida bona is a Latin phrase for the principle of Roman law that a judge is to premise his judgement on "good business norms"[1][2] and that parties to a contract are to satisfy their contractual obligations, thus permitting the parties to trust each other.[3] A contract should be according to the branch norms unless otherwise expressly provided. The principle was a condition for permanent trading relations during the ancient Roman Republic: in the second century BC the Roman praetors began applying the principle while commerce in the Mediterranean increased.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Nguyen, Nam H. (2018-03-18). Essential 25000 English-Polish Law Dictionary (in Polish). Nam H Nguyen.
  2. ^ Agrawal, Chandresh; books, nandini (2024-05-14). SEBI Exam PDF- Officer Grade A- Assistant Manager (Legal) Stream Exam: Law Objective Questions From Various Competitive Exams. Chandresh Agrawal.
  3. ^ Parnes, Joseph (2020-03-26). Short Selling for the Long Term: How a Combination of Short and Long Positions Leads to Investing Success. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-52778-7.