INCONSULTO
Lat In the civil law. Unadvisedly; unintentionally. Dig. 28, 4, 1.
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Lat In the civil law. Unadvisedly; unintentionally. Dig. 28, 4, 1.
Want of chastity; Indulgence in unlawful carnal connection. Lucasv. Nichols, 52 N. C. 35; State v. Ilewlin, 128 X. C. 571, 37 S. E. 952.
In the rule that statutes should be so construed as to avoid”inconvenience,” this means, as applied to the public, the sacrifice or jeoparding ofimportant public interests or hampering the legitimate activities of
A proctor or vicar. Incorporalia bello non adquirnntur.Incorporeal tilings are not acquired by war. 0 Maule & S. 104.
1. To create a corporation ; to confer a corporate franchise upondeterminate persons.2. To declare that another document shall be taken as part of the document iuwhich the declaration is made as
1. The act or process of forming or creating a corporation; the formation of a legal or political body, with the quality of perpetual existence and succession, unless limited by the act
Without body ; not of material nature; the opposite of “corporeal,” (g. v.)
A species of rogue or offender, described in the statutes 5Geo. IV. c. S3, and 1 & 2 Vict c. 38. 4 Steph. Comm. 309.
The produce of laud; (>>) the offspring of animals.
Lat. Increase or improvement, opposed to decrementum or abatement
An unlawful gaining upon the right or possession of another. See ENCROACHMENT.
To impute blame or guilt; to accuse; to involve in guilt or crime.
In the law of evidence. Going or tending to establish guilt; intendedto establish guilt; criminative. Burrill, Circ. Ev. 251, 252.
A person who is in present possession of an office; one who is legallyauthorized to discharge the duties of an office. State v. McCollister, 11 Ohio, 50; Statev. Blakemore, 104 Mo. 340,
Any right to, or interest in, land which may subsist in third persons,to the diminution of the value of the estate of the tenant, but consistently with thepassing of the fee. Fitch
In tbe civil law. A robber; a spoiler or plunderer. Expilutorcs auntatrociores fures. Dig. 47, 18, 1, 1.
Cessation; termination from mere lapse of time; as the expiration of alease, or statute, and the like. Marshall v. Rugg, 6 Wyo. 270, 45 Pac. 486, 33 L. It. A.679; Rowinan v.
In Scotch law and practice. Expiration of the period withinwhich an adjudication may be redeemed, by paying the debt in the decree ofadjudication. Bell.
In old records. The rents and profits of an estate.
In the civil law. The fourth pleading; equivalent to the surrejoinder of the common law. Calvin.
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