What does predicate mean in law?
Then, what does it mean to predicate something?
predicate. The verb predicate means to require something as a condition of something else, and we use this term mostly in connection with logic, mathematics, or rhetoric. To predicate your argument on certain facts is to use those facts as evidence.
Also asked, which of the following are examples of predicate Offences?
Under the Schedule to the money laundering Act, 2010, a number of offences have been declared as predicate offences and these include abetment, concealing, criminal conspiracy, taking gratification, wrongful confinement, kidnapping, extortion, criminal breach of trust, dishonest and fraudulent dealings.
Lay the predicate means that there must be an evidentiary reason to allow the thing you are trying to get admitted, admitted into evidence.