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Advocates, Faculty of

Advocates, Faculty of, the bar of Scotland. The Faculty was instituted along with the College of Justice in 1532. Members are entitled to plead in every Court in Scotland, and also before the House of Lords,...

bench

bench 1 : the place where a judge sits in court [asked counsel to approach the ] compare bar, dock, jury box, sidebar, stand 2 : the court or system of courts serving an area [the...

Admonition

Admonition, a judicial or ecclesiastic censure or reprimand. See MONITION. Admonition, means a mild rebuke, Webster Law Dictionary, p. 19. Means a reprimand to an accused person about to be discharged, A Dictionary of Law -...

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Dower

Dower [fr. dos, dotis, Lat., a marriage gift; dotare dower, Fr., endow, to furnish with a marriage portion. Dotarium, M. Lat., dotaire, Prov.; douaire, Fr.; a dowry of marriage provision; douairiere, a widow in possession of...

General Council

General Council (of the Bar), the full title of the Bar Council. See BAR COUNCIL. General Council (of the Catholic Church), a council consisting of members of the Church from most parts of the world, but...

Inns of Chancery

Inns of Chancery, so called because anciently inhab-ited by such clerks as chiefly studied the framing of writs, which regularly belonged to the cursitors, who were officers of the Court of Chancery. There were nine of...

Judge

Judge [fr. juge, Fr.; judex, Lat.], one invested with authority to determine any cause or question in a Court of judicature. The word 'judge' denotes not only every person who is officially designated as a judge...

Limitation of actions and prosecutions

Limitation of actions and prosecutions. By various statutes, of which the first was 21 Jac. 1, c. 16, the (English) Limitation Act, 1623, and the principal succeeding ones, the Real Property Limitation Act, 1833 (3 &...

Solid drawn

Drawn out from a heated solid bar as by a process of spiral rolling which first hollows the bar and then expands the cavity by forcing the bar over a pointed mandrel fixed in front of...

Wills

tenants in tail after possibility of issue extinct or to a tenant-in-tail who is restrained by statute from barring or defeating the entail. S. twenty-five includes lapsed and void devises in a residuary devise; s. twenty-six makes

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Barring - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

Advocates, Faculty of

Advocates, Faculty of, the bar of Scotland. The Faculty was instituted along with the College of Justice in 1532. Members are entitled to plead in every Court in Scotland, and also before the House of Lords,...

bench

bench 1 : the place where a judge sits in court [asked counsel to approach the ] compare bar, dock, jury box, sidebar, stand 2 : the court or system of courts serving an area [the...

Admonition

Admonition, a judicial or ecclesiastic censure or reprimand. See MONITION. Admonition, means a mild rebuke, Webster Law Dictionary, p. 19. Means a reprimand to an accused person about to be discharged, A Dictionary of Law -...

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Dower

Dower [fr. dos, dotis, Lat., a marriage gift; dotare dower, Fr., endow, to furnish with a marriage portion. Dotarium, M. Lat., dotaire, Prov.; douaire, Fr.; a dowry of marriage provision; douairiere, a widow in possession of...

General Council

General Council (of the Bar), the full title of the Bar Council. See BAR COUNCIL. General Council (of the Catholic Church), a council consisting of members of the Church from most parts of the world, but...

Inns of Chancery

Inns of Chancery, so called because anciently inhab-ited by such clerks as chiefly studied the framing of writs, which regularly belonged to the cursitors, who were officers of the Court of Chancery. There were nine of...

Judge

Judge [fr. juge, Fr.; judex, Lat.], one invested with authority to determine any cause or question in a Court of judicature. The word 'judge' denotes not only every person who is officially designated as a judge...

Limitation of actions and prosecutions

Limitation of actions and prosecutions. By various statutes, of which the first was 21 Jac. 1, c. 16, the (English) Limitation Act, 1623, and the principal succeeding ones, the Real Property Limitation Act, 1833 (3 &...

Solid drawn

Drawn out from a heated solid bar as by a process of spiral rolling which first hollows the bar and then expands the cavity by forcing the bar over a pointed mandrel fixed in front of...

Wills

tenants in tail after possibility of issue extinct or to a tenant-in-tail who is restrained by statute from barring or defeating the entail. S. twenty-five includes lapsed and void devises in a residuary devise; s. twenty-six makes

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