释义 |
‖ duces tecum Law.|ˈdjuːsiːz ˈtiːkʌm| [Latin phrase: more fully sub pœna duces tecum, ‘Under penalty thou shalt bring with thee’.] A writ commanding a person to produce in court specified documents or other things which are in his custody, and are required as evidence.
1617Minsheu Ductor, Duces tecum, is a Writ commanding one to appeare at a day in the Chauncerie, and to bring with him some peece of euidence, or other thing that the Court would view. 1658in Phillips. 1715Amer. State Papers Misc. (1834) I. 682. |