malice in fact

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

malice in fact (uncountable)

  1. (law) Provable intent to commit a crime or otherwise do harm.
    • 1845 January, Peter Vivian Daniel, “White v. Nicholls et al.”, in Benjamin C. Howard, editor, United States Reports[1], volume 44, Philadelphia: T & J. W. Johnson, page 281:
      But falsehood and want of probable cause are in themselves evidence of malice in fact.
    • 1888 June 6, William Vernon Harcourt, parliamentary debates (House of Commons):
      A private individual very often made a statement out of malice, but a newspaper very often published these matters not for malice in fact, but because it answered their purpose to do so []

Antonyms[edit]