incapacity
51manifest incapacity — Obvious incapacity. In reference to a physician, a want of power to comprehend or to act, so obvious that no proof is necessary to establish it other than proof of the act or omission itself. Yoshizawa v Hewitt (CA9 Hawaii) 52 F2d 411, 79 ALR 317 …
52mental incapacity — A condition of outright insanity or other weakness or deficiency of mind which renders the person afflicted incapable of understanding the nature and effect of a business transaction. 13 Am J2d Cane Inst § 13. Old age, weakening of the memory and …
53judge`s incapacity — inability of a judge to conduct a trial …
54legal incapacity — See disability; legal capacity …
55partial incapacity — See partial disability; partial insanity …
56total incapacity — See total disability …
57mental incapacity — noun or mental incompetence 1. : an absence of mental capacity 2. : an inability through mental illness or mental deficiency of any sort to carry on the everyday affairs of life or to care for one s person or property with reasonable discretion …
58legal disability — Incapacity to contract; infancy; unsoundness of mind. Re Price s Estate, 87 Ohio App 23, 93 NE2d 769. Any condition which renders a person unable to act for himself or bind himself so that the law will not regard his acts as void or voidable. A… …
59Incapacities — Incapacity In ca*pac i*ty, n.; pl. {Incapacities}. [Cf. F. incapacit[ e].] [1913 Webster] 1. Lack of capacity; lack of physical or intellectual power; inability. [1913 Webster] 2. (Law) Lack of legal ability or competency to do, give, transmit,… …
60impotency quoad hoc — Incapacity for sexual intercourse with this person …