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Common Fine - Law Dictionary Search Results

Common fine

Common fine, a small sum of money paid to the lords by

Aggravated assaults

sufficiently punished under the provisions of s. 42 as to common assaults and batteries,' to give a convicted offender six months' … convicted offender six months' imprisonment with hard labour or to fine him up to 20l. including costs (the maximum punishment for

Fumitory

The common uame of several species of the genus Fumaria annual herbs … the genus Fumaria annual herbs of the Old World with finely dissected leaves and small flowers in dense racemes or spikes

Copyhold

for the two pillars, upon which every custom rests, are common usage and existence time out of mind. No copyhold estate … descent of a copyhold estate, a sum of money or fine is due to the lord from the heir upon his

Fine

writ of right, usually of covenant, issued out of the Common Pleas against the conusor; and the pr'cipe, which was a … Fine, a sum of money or mulct imposed upon an offender,

Tail

would (if unbarred) have devolved, and a recovery at the Common Law (which was a real action carried onto judgment), giving … a trustee in bankruptcy may bar the entail, see (English) Fines and Recoveries Act, 1833 (3 & 4 Will. 4, c.

Misdemeanour

misdemeanour, whether the crime attempted be so by statute or Common Law (Arch. Cr.Pl., 2); any disobedience of a statute, Reg. … less serious than a felony and is usually punishable by fine, penalty. Forfeiture or confinement in a place other than prison,

Slime

climatic action; they include clay, alumina hydrated iron, near colloidal common earths and weathered feldspars. Secondary slimes are very finely ground … Pradesh, (2004) 6 SCC 281. Means a material of extremely fine-particle size encountered in ore treatment (ASG Gloss), National Mineral Development

Court-leet

purpose of preventing small offences in the nature of a common nuisance,' and still having 'power to impose fines for certain … of a common nuisance,' and still having 'power to impose fines for certain offenes, such the stopping up of ways': Solicitor's

Acknowledgement of a wife's assurance

to land, and by 20 & 21 Vict. C. 57, commonly called (English) 'Malins's Act,' which incorporated the procedure of the … use to comply with the formalities prescribed by the (English) Fines and Recoveries Act, 1833 (3 & 4 Will. 4, c.

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