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Eigne - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: eigne

Bastard Eigne

Bastard Eigne, an elder son born before marriage; thus if a man had a natural son, and afterwards married the mother and by her had a legitimate son, the latter was mulier puisne, and the elder son bastard eigne, Watk. Descent. C. v. See Legitimacy Act, 1926 (c. 60) and LEGITIMATION....


Eigne

Eigne [fr. aine, Fr.], eldest, or first-born. See BAS-TARD EIGNE....


Eigne

Eldest firstborn...


Foreign security

Foreign security, means any security, in the form of shares, stocks, bonds, debentures or any other instrument denominated or expressed in foreign currency and includes securities expressed in for-eign currency, but where redemption or any form of return such as interest or dividends is payable in India currency. [Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (42 of 1999), s. 2 (o)]...


Mulier puisne

Mulier puisne. When a man has a bastard son, and afterwards marries the mother, and by her has also a legitimate son, the elder son is bastard eigne and the younger son is mulier puisne. See 2 Bl. Com. 248....


Registered Foreign Institutional Investor (FII)

Registered Foreign Institutional Investor (FII), means a foreign institutional investor registered with Securities and Exchange Board of India. [For-eign Exchange Management (Foreign Exchange Derivative Contracts) Regulations, 2000, Reg. 2 (vi)]...


Serjeant

Serjeant [fr. serviens, Lat.], used in several senses:-A feudal tenure by knight service due only to king, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn.(1) Serjeants-at-law, or of the coif (servientes ad legem), otherwise called serjeants counter, the highest degree in the Common Law, as doctors in the Civil Law; but, according to Spelman, a doctor of law is superior to a serjeant, for the very name of a doctor is magisterial, but that of a serjeant is only ministerial. Serjeants-at-law were made by the sovereign's writ, addressed unto such as are called, commanding them to take upon them that degree by a certain day, Fortescue, c. 50; 3 Cro. 1; Dyer, 72; 2 Inst. 213.The monopoly of exclusive audience enjoyed by the serjeants in the Court of Common Pleas, during term time, ineffectually attempted to be abolished by Royal Warrant in 1834 [see In the Matter of the Serjeants-at-law, (1840) 6 Bing NC 235], was abolished in 1846 by 9 & 10 Vict. c. 54.The judges of the Common Law Courts were formerly req...


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