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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Act of indemnity

Indemnity \In*dem"ni*ty\, n.; pl. Indemnities. [L. indemnitas, fr. indemnis uninjured: cf. F. indemnit['e]. See Indemnify.]

  1. Security; insurance; exemption from loss or damage, past or to come; immunity from penalty, or the punishment of past offenses; amnesty.

    Having first obtained a promise of indemnity for the riot they had committed.
    --Sir W. Scott.

  2. Indemnification, compensation, or remuneration for loss, damage, or injury sustained.

    They were told to expect, upon the fall of Walpole, a large and lucrative indemnity for their pretended wrongs.
    --Ld. Mahon.

    Note: Insurance is a contract of indemnity.
    --Arnould. The owner of private property taken for public use is entitled to compensation or indemnity.
    --Kent.

    Act of indemnity (Law), an act or law passed in order to relieve persons, especially in an official station, from some penalty to which they are liable in consequence of acting illegally, or, in case of ministers, in consequence of exceeding the limits of their strict constitutional powers. These acts also sometimes provide compensation for losses or damage, either incurred in the service of the government, or resulting from some public measure.

Act of indemnity

Act \Act\ ([a^]kt), n. [L. actus, fr. agere to drive, do: cf. F. acte. See Agent.]

  1. That which is done or doing; the exercise of power, or the effect, of which power exerted is the cause; a performance; a deed. That best portion of a good man's life, His little, nameless, unremembered acts Of kindness and of love. --Wordsworth. [1913 Webster] Hence, in specific uses:

    1. The result of public deliberation; the decision or determination of a legislative body, council, court of justice, etc.; a decree, edit, law, judgment, resolve, award; as, an act of Parliament, or of Congress.

    2. A formal solemn writing, expressing that something has been done.
      --Abbott.

    3. A performance of part of a play; one of the principal divisions of a play or dramatic work in which a certain definite part of the action is completed.

    4. A thesis maintained in public, in some English universities, by a candidate for a degree, or to show the proficiency of a student.

  2. A state of reality or real existence as opposed to a possibility or possible existence. [Obs.]

    The seeds of plants are not at first in act, but in possibility, what they afterward grow to be.
    --Hooker.

  3. Process of doing; action. In act, in the very doing; on the point of (doing). ``In act to shoot.''
    --Dryden.

    This woman was taken . . . in the very act.
    --John viii.

  4. Act of attainder. (Law) See Attainder.

    Act of bankruptcy (Law), an act of a debtor which renders him liable to be adjudged a bankrupt.

    Act of faith. (Ch. Hist.) See Auto-da-F['e].

    Act of God (Law), an inevitable accident; such extraordinary interruption of the usual course of events as is not to be looked for in advance, and against which ordinary prudence could not guard.

    Act of grace, an expression often used to designate an act declaring pardon or amnesty to numerous offenders, as at the beginning of a new reign.

    Act of indemnity, a statute passed for the protection of those who have committed some illegal act subjecting them to penalties.
    --Abbott.

    Act in pais, a thing done out of court (anciently, in the country), and not a matter of record.

    Syn: See Action.

Wikipedia
Act of Indemnity

In legal terms, an Act of Indemnity is a statute passed to protect people who have committed some illegal act which would otherwise cause them to be subjected to legal penalties.

Act of Indemnity may also refer to:

Usage examples of "act of indemnity".

The senate was permitted to discharge the ungrateful office of punishment, and the emperor reserved for himself the pleasure and merit of obtaining by his intercession a general act of indemnity.

But as the late Act of Indemnity had laid asleep the quarrel itself, so the Government had recommended family and personal peace upon all occasions to the whole nation.

I moved back to England some two months ago, when the house was restored to me under the terms of the Act of Indemnity and Oblivion.

But we shall not be disavowed by the nation, and their act of indemnity will confirm &amp.