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

SUCCESSION

In the civil law and in Louisiana. I. The fact of the transmission of the rights, estate, obligations, and charges of a deceased person to his heir or heirs. 2. The right

L9 SUDDEN HEAT OF PASSION

death of his ancestor acquires his estate by right of representation as his heir at law. See In re Donahue’s Estate, 30 Cal. 332; Barclay. v. Cameron, 25 Tex. 241.

SUCCESSOR

One who succeeds to the rights or the place of another: particularly, the person or persons who constitute a corporation after the death or removal of those who preceded them as corporators.

SUCKEN, SUCHEN

In Scotch law. The whole lands astricted to a mill; that is, the lands of which the tenants are obliged to send their grain to that mill. Bell.

SUDDEN HEAT OF PASSION

In the common-law definition of manslaughter, this phrase means an access of rage or anger, suddenly arising from a contemporary provocation. It means that the provocation must arise at the time of

SUGGESTION

passion is not tbe result of a former provocation, and the act must be directly caused by the passion arising out of the provocation at the time of the homicide. It is

SUBDER

In Hindu law. The best; tbe fore-court of a house; the chief seat of gov- ernment, contradistinguished from “mofus- sil,” or interior of the country; the presiden- cy. Wharton.

SUE

To prosecute by law; to commence legal proceedings against a party. It is ap- plied almost exclusively to the institution and prosecution of a civil action. See Chal- lenor v. Niles, 78

SUERTE

In Spanish law. A small lot of ground. Particularly, such a lot within the limits of a city or town used for cultivation or planting as a garden, vineyard or orchard. Building

SUFFER

To sufTer an act to be done, by a person who can prevent it, is to permit or consent to it; to approve of it, and not to hinder it. It implies

SUFFERANCE

Toleration; negative permission by not forbidding; passive consent; license implied from the omission or neglect to enforce an adverse right.

SUFFERING A RECOVERY

A recovery was effected by the party wishing to convey the land suffering a fictitious action to be brought against him by the party to whom the land was to be conveyed,

SUFFICIENT

As to sufficient “Consideration” and “Evidence,” see those titles.

SUFFRAGAN

Bishops who in former times were appointed to supply the place of others during their absence on embassies or other business were so termed. They were consecrated as other bishops were, and

SUFFRAGE

A vote; the act of voting; the right or privilege of casting a vote at public elections. The last is the meaning of the term in such phrases as “the extension of

SUFFRAGIUM

Lat. In Roman law. A vote; the right of voting iu the assemblies of the people. Aid or influence used or promised to obtain some honor or office; the purchase of oilice.

SUGGESTIO FALSI

Lat. Suggestion or representation of that which is false; false representation. To recite in a deed that a will was duly executed, when it was not, is suggestio falsi; and to conceal

SUGGESTIVE INTERROGATION

phrase which has been used by some writers to signify the same thing as “leading question.” 2 Beuth. Jud. Ev. b. 3, c. 3. It is used in the French law.

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