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Effect of a general traverse

Effect of a traverse putting the opposite party to the strictest proof

Effect of a traverse which is half admission or half denial

Effect of denying an averment by a defendant

Effect of failure by the defendant to traverse specific averments in the statement of claim

Effect of failure to deny an averment

Effect of failure to specifically traverse an averment

Effect of failure to traverse facts

How a traverse should be done

Meaning and effect of a traverse

Principles guiding traverse by the defendant

The principle that a party who denies an averment must do so specifically

The principle that a proper traverse is required in order to raise an issue of fact

The principle that averments in a pleading must be specifically denied or they will be deemed admitted

The purpose of a general traverse

The rule that a denial of a material allegation of fact must be specific

The rule that essential averments in the statement of claim should be specifically traversed

What amounts to an insufficient traverse

What amounts to a specific denial

What a traverse connotes

What constitutes a proper traverse in law

When a traverse in a statement of defence will amount to sufficient denial

When a traverse to a statement of claim will constitute sufficient denial

When common traverse occurs

Whether a bare denial which does not confront the facts put forward by a party in an action amounts to denial in law

Whether a general traverse amounts to a denial in law

Whether a general traverse is sufficient denial

Whether a general traverse is sufficient to controvert material and essential averments in a statement of claim

Whether a general traverse is sufficient to deny a specific allegation in the statement of claim

Whether a general traverse will suffice where there is specific denial of averments in an affidavit

Whether an affidavit can be used to traverse facts pleaded by the plaintiff

Whether a pleading that the defendant can neither admit or deny an averment constitutes a denial

Whether it is proper for a plaintiff to deny grounds in a statement of defence by way of counter-claim

Whether there must be proper traverse to raise an issue of fact

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