3. Meng'ámuk pung'gung, where a person destroys his property while he has a law-suit pending.

4. Mutúng památang, where a person, during the course of a law-suit, leaves his master or chief and goes to another.

5. Sána dénta, where a person concerned in a law-suit either magnifies or lessens the state of the case.

6. Ng'árika Pátra, where a person denies his own hand-writing.

7. Nídra permána, where a person, intending to kill another, goes and lives on terms of intimacy with him.

8. Dámar kitúdah, where a person, on first making a complaint of his own accord, brings evidence in support of it.

9. Ngaríka wárna, where a person has a law-suit, which another than his own chief is acquainted with the merits of.

10. Sírna ning jáya, where a person objects to his own witnesses.

11. Perlíga, where a person finds a thing and does not take it to some proper person where he lives.

12. Génti wátang, i. e. the case of a person who is the first to bring evidence.