CONGE D’AECORDER
Leave to accord. A permission granted by the court in the old process of levying a fine, to the defendant to agree I with the plaintiff
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Leave to accord. A permission granted by the court in the old process of levying a fine, to the defendant to agree I with the plaintiff
In old English law. Jointly and severally. CONJUNCTIO. In the civil law. Conjunction ; connection of words in a sentence. See Dig. 50, 16 29, 142. Conjunctio mariti et femina: est de
Conqueror. The title given to William of Normandy
A term derived from the civil law, denoting a contract founded upon and completed by the mere consent of the contracting parties, without any external formality or symbolic act to fix the
The act or process of consigning goods ; the transportation of goods consigned; an article or collection of goods sent to a factor to be sold; goods or property sent, by the
In practice. A rule or order of court requiring a plaintiff who has instituted separate suits upon several claims against the same defendant, to consolidate them in one action, where that can
Officers properly appointed under the constitution for the government of the people
In old English law. A writ of right close, which lay against a tenant who deforced his’ lord of the rent or service due to him. Reg. Orig. 159; Fitzh. Nat. Brev.
The act of the mind in considering with attention. Continued attention of the mind to a particular subject. Consideration of an act or series of acts with the intention of doing or
The context of a particular sentence or clause in a statute, contract, will, etc., comprises those parts of the text which immediately precede and follow it. The context may sometimes be scrutinized,
Is interchangeable with the term “uninterrupted adverse use.” Davidson v. Nicholson, 59 Ind. 411
A criminal; one prosecuted for a crime.
In Old English law. A counter-plea. Townsh. PI. 01.
Joining in the promotion of a given purpose; lending assistance to the production of a given result. As to contributory “Infringement” and “Negligence,” see those titles
In old English law. Suitable; agreeable; convenient; fitting. Litt.
The transformation of one species of property into another, as money into land or laud into money; or, more particularly, a fiction of law, by which equity assumes that such a transformation
Covert; covered.
In medical Jurisprudence. A disposition or habit of using obscene language, developiug unexpectedly in the particular individual or contrary to his previous history and habits, recognized as a sign of insanity or
A person summoned to answer a bill, petition, or libel, together with another respondent. Now chiefly used to designate the person charged with adultery with the respondent in a suit for divorce
The name of an ancient officer of the common law, whose office and functions are continued in modern English and American administration. The coroner is an officer belonging to each county, and
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