Cancelli - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: cancelliCancelli
Cancelli (lattice work), the rails or balusters inclosing the bar of a court of justice or the communion-table. Also the lines drawn on the face of a will or other writing, with the intention of revoking or annulling it....
Cancelli
An interwoven or latticed wall or inclosure latticework rails or crossbars as around the bar of a court of justice between the chancel and the nave of a church or in a window...
Cancellous
Having a spongy or porous structure made up of cancelli cancellated as the cancellous texture of parts of many bones...
Chancellor, Lord
Chancellor, Lord, properly, 'the Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain' [fr. Cancellarius, low Lat., cancelli, Lat., latticework], the highest judicial functionary in the kingdom, and superior, in point of precedency, to every temporal lord. He is appointed by the delivery of the king's Great Seal into his custody. He may not be a Roman Catholic (10 Geo. 4, c. 7, s. 12). He is a cabinet minister, a privy councillor, and prolocutor of the House of Lords by prescription (but not necessarily, though usually, a peer of the realm), and vacates his office with the ministry by which he was appointed, but is entitled to a pension. When royal commissions are issued for opening the session, for giving the royal assent to bills, or for proroguing Parliament, the Lord Chancellor is always one of the commissioners, and reads the royal speech on the occasion. To him belongs the appointment of all justices of the peace throughout the kingdom, and the appointment and removal of county court judges (se...
Chancery
Chancery [fr. Cancelli, lattice-work, Lat.; chancellerie, Fr.]. the Court of Chancery, which administered equity (see that title) so far as distinct from law, was the highest court of judicature in this kingdom next to Parliament.Its powers and jurisdiction were in 1875 transferred to (I.) The High Court of Justice, and (II.) The Court of Appeal [(English) Jud. Act, 1873, ss. 16-18].(I) There is by the (English) Judicature Act, 1873, replaced by the English Judicature Act, 1925, s. 4, a Division of the High Court of Justice called the Chancery Division. To this Division are assigned (1) matters in which the court of Chancery had exclusive statutory jurisdiction (except County Court appeals), of these, the jurisdiction under the (English) Charitable Trusts Acts, 1853-1869, is practically the only portion nw remaining, the other jurisdictions having become exercisable under subsequent legislation. (Note: a. P. 1934, p. 2374), and (2) causes and matters for the administration of estates o...
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