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・ Tabuk, Kalinga
・ Tabuk, Saudi Arabia
・ Tabukiniberu
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・ Tabula (company)
・ Tabula (game)
・ Tabula (magazine)
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Tabula in naufragio
・ Tabula Peutingeriana
・ Tabula Poetica
・ Tabula rasa
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・ Tabula Rasa (Brymo album)
・ Tabula Rasa (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
・ Tabula Rasa (disambiguation)
・ Tabula Rasa (Einstürzende Neubauten album)
・ Tabula Rasa (Finnish band)
・ Tabula Rasa (Heroes)
・ Tabula Rasa (Lost)
・ Tabula Rasa (novel)
・ Tabula Rasa (Pittsburgh band)
・ Tabula Rasa (Pärt)


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Tabula in naufragio : ウィキペディア英語版
Tabula in naufragio

''Tabula in naufragio'' is a legal Latin phrase, literally interpreted as "a plank in a shipwreck". It is used metaphorically in law to designate the power subsisting in a third (or subsequent) mortgagee, who took the third mortgage without notice of the second mortgage, and then acquired the first mortgage and attached it to the third mortgage, thereby obtaining priority over the second mortgagee.
The phrase was first attributed to Sir Matthew Hale, although he died more than 200 years before the advent of the modern English doctrine of tacking arising from ''Hopkinson v Rolt''. According to ''Black's Law Dictionary'': "It may be fairly said that the doctrine survives only in the unjust and much criticised English rule of tacking."
More generally, and more usually, the phrase is used, dismissively or wryly, to describe a proposition in legal submissions which the proponent hopes can (just about) stay afloat even though the rest of that party's case has been holed below the waterline. Such a proposition will rarely if ever prevail.
An example of this latter usage appears in the minority judgement of Lord Buckmaster in ''Donoghue v Stevenson'', a case that established the modern concept of negligence in 1932. He wrote, "this passage has been used as a ''tabula in naufragio'' for many litigants struggling in the seas of adverse authority."
Similarly, Lord Diplock used the phrase in ''Berger & Co Inc v Gill & Duffus SA'':〔(''Berger & Co Inc v Gill & Duffus SA'' ), () AC 382 (HL)〕 "It has for more than half a century justifiably remained one of those submerged cases which lawyers in general have tacitly accepted as being a total loss, until it was dredged up in the course of the hearing of the instant case in your Lordships' House to provide, in the judgments of Knox CJ and Higgins J,〔in 〕 a ''tabula in naufragio'' for the buyers."
The expression has been re-popularized in the Pirates of the Caribbean third movie "At World's End", when Jack Sparrow addresses so his fellow pirates to argue for an active response against the attackers of Shipwreck Cove.
==Footnotes==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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