Your Free Online Legal Dictionary • Featuring Black’s Law Dictionary, 2nd Ed.

HECK

An engine to take fish In the river Ouse. 23 Hen. VIII. c. 18.

HEDA

A small haven, wharf, or landing place.

HEDAGIUM

Toll or customary dues at the hithe or wharf, for landing goods, etc.,from which exemption was granted by the crown to some particular persons andsocieties. Wharton.

HEDGE-BOTE

An allowance of wood for repairing hedges or fences, which a tenantor lessee has a right to take off the land let or demised to him. 2 Bl. Comm. 35.

HEGEMONY

The leadership of one among several independent confederate states.

HEGIRA

The epoch or account of time used by the Arabians and the Turks, whobegin their computation from the day that Mahomet was compelled to escape fromMecca, which happened on Friday, July 16,

HEGUMENOS

The leader of the monks in the Greek Church.

HEIFER

A young cow which has not had a calf. 2 East, P. C. 616. And see State v.McMinn, 34 Ark. 162; Mundell v. Hammond, 40 Vt. 645.

HEIR

At common law. A person who succeeds, by the rules of law, to an estate in lands, tenements, or hereditaments, upon the death of his ancestor, by descent and right of relationship.

HEIR-LOOMS

Such goods and chattels as, contrary to the nature of chattels, shallgo by special custom to the heir aloug with the inheritance, aud not to the executor.The termination “loom” (Sax.) signifies a

HEIRS

A word used in deeds of conveyance, (either solely, or in connection withothers,) where it Is intended to pass a fee.

HEIRSHIP

The quality or condition of being heir, or the relation between the heirand his ancestor.

HEIRSHIP MOVABLES

In Scotch law. The movables which go to the heir, and not tothe executor, that the land may not go to the heir completely dismantled, such as thebest of furniture, horses, cows,

HELL

The name formerly given to a place under the exchequer chamber, where theking’s debtors were confined. Rich. Diet

HELM

Thatch or straw; a covering for the head in war; a coat of arms bearing acrest; the tiller or handle of the rudder of a ship.

HELOWE-WALL

The end-wall covering and defending the rest of the building.Paroch. Antiq. 573

HEMIPLEGIA

In medical jurisprudence. Unilateral paralysis; paralysis of one side ofthe body, commonly due to a lesion in the brain, but sometimes originating from tliespinal cord, as in “Brown-Sequard’s paralysis,” unilateral paralysis with

HENCEFORTH

A word of futurity, which, as employed in legal documents, statutes,and the like, always imports a continuity of action or condition from the present timeforward, but excludes all the past. Thomson v.

Topic Archives:

Disclaimer

This site contains general legal information but does not constitute professional legal advice for your particular situation. The Law Dictionary is not a law firm, and this page does not create an attorney-client or legal adviser relationship. If you have specific questions, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.