CIVIS
Lat. In the Roman law. A citizen ; as distinguished from incola, (an inhabitant;) origin or birth constituting the former, domicile the latter. Code, 10, 40, 7. And see U. S. v.
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Lat. In the Roman law. A citizen ; as distinguished from incola, (an inhabitant;) origin or birth constituting the former, domicile the latter. Code, 10, 40, 7. And see U. S. v.
In the practice of the English chancery division, where there are several parties to an administration action, including those who have been served with notice of the decree or judgment, and it
One certifying that no contagious or infectious disease exists, or certifying as to healthy conditions generally without exception or reservation
The having the head shaven, which was formerly peculiar to clerks, or persons in orders, and which the coifs worn by serjeants at law are supposed to have been introduced to conceal.
See CROWN OFFICE IN CHANCERY
A gaol; a prison or dungeon
A uniting or combining together of persons; a conspiracy. 9 Coke, 56.
A collection or compendium of laws. A complete system of positive law, scientifically arranged, and promulgated by legislative authority. Johnson v. Harrison, 47 Minn. 575, 50 N. W. 923, 28 Am. St.
One who is a joint executor with one or more others
One of several to whom an Inheritance descends.
In old English law. A comparison of marks or seals. A mode of testing the genuineness of a seal, by comparing it with another known to be genuine. Adams. See Bract, fol.
The college or society of the admiralty
That semblance or presumption of authority sustaining the acts of a public officer which is derived from his apparent title to the office or from a writ or other process in his
This phrase, anciently used in the language of pleading, and still surviving in some jurisdictions, occurs at the commencement of a defendant’s plea or demurrer; and of its two verbs the former
In French law. A special or limited partnership, where the contract is between one or more persons who are general partners, and jointly and severally responsible, and one or more other persons
A phrase used to designate the whole body of substantive jurisprudence applicable to the rights, intercourse, and relations of persons engaged in commerce, trade, or mercantile pursuits. It is not a very
A written authority issued by a court of justice, giving power to take C the testimony of witnesses who cannot be per- l sonally produced in court. Tracy v. Suydam, 30 Barb.
Lat. In the civil law. An action of loan; an action for a thing lent. An action given for the recovery of a thing loaned, (commodatuin,) and not returned to the lender.
In pleading. (Otherwise called “blank bar.”) A plea to compel the plaintiff to assign the particular place where the trespass has been committed. Steph. PI. 256.
Several persons who perish at the same time in consequence of the same calamity.
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