IN JURE CESSIO

in jure cessio (in joor-ee sesh-ee-oh). [Latin “a surrender in law”] Roman law. A fictitious trial held to transfer ownership of property; a collusive claim to formally convey property, esp. incorporeal property, by a court’s assignment of ownership. • At trial, the transferee appeared before a praetor and asserted ownership of the property. The actual owner also appeared, but did not contest the assertion, and so allowed the transfer of the property to the plaintiff. In jure cessio was most often used to convey incorporeal property. — Also spelled in iure cessio.

[Blacks Law 8th]