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CIRCUMSTANCE

Volume 6 · 63 words · 1823 Edition

a particularity, which, though not essential to any action, yet doth some way affect it.

CIRCUMSTANTIAL evidence, in Law, or the doctrine of presumption, takes place next to positive proof: circumstances which either necessarily or usually attend facts of a particular nature, that cannot be demonstratively evinced, are called presumptions, and are only to be relied on till the contrary be actually proved.