Pauperize - Law Dictionary Search Results
Certiorari
Court of justice in criminal causes, all indictments, coroners' inquisitions, summary convictions by magistrates, orders of removal of paupers, and of poor's rates, also orders made by commissioners of sewers and other commissioners, town councils, and railway
Official solicitor
s. 2, the duty of visiting prisoners committed for contempt, and he may be assigned as solicitor to pauper litigants, and acts as guardian ad litem to persons under a disability. Subject to an order to the
Nosocomi
Nosocomi, managers of pauper hospitals, Civ. Law.
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Husband and wife
justices to be proper. Payments under this Act, however, can only be made to the wife as a pauper; and a more liberal scale, which may rise as high as 2l. per week, may be given by
House of correction
Correction, fist established in the reign of Elizabeth, were originally designed for the penal confinement (after conviction) of paupers and vagrants refusing to work; but by 5 & 6 Wm. 4, c. 38, ss. 3, 4, reciting
Contributory
and who are liable in a secondary degree. A shareholder may sometimes avoid liability by transfer to a pauper. See Re Discoveries Finance Corporation, (1910) 1 Ch 312, but see Hyam's Case, (1859) 1 De 9 F&J
Depauperize
To free from paupers to rescue from poverty
Skilligalee
A kind of thin weak broth or oatmeal porridge served out to prisoners and paupers in England also a drink made of oatmeal sugar and water sometimes used in the English navy or
Poorhouse
A dwelling for a number of paupers maintained at public expense an almshouse a workhouse
Jukes The
investigated by R L Dugdale as an example of the inheritance of criminal and immoral tendencies disease and pauperism Sixty per cent of those traced showed degeneracy and they are estimated to have cost society 1308000 in
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Pauperize - Law Dictionary Search Results
Certiorari
Court of justice in criminal causes, all indictments, coroners' inquisitions, summary convictions by magistrates, orders of removal of paupers, and of poor's rates, also orders made by commissioners of sewers and other commissioners, town councils, and railway
Official solicitor
s. 2, the duty of visiting prisoners committed for contempt, and he may be assigned as solicitor to pauper litigants, and acts as guardian ad litem to persons under a disability. Subject to an order to the
Nosocomi
Nosocomi, managers of pauper hospitals, Civ. Law.
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Husband and wife
justices to be proper. Payments under this Act, however, can only be made to the wife as a pauper; and a more liberal scale, which may rise as high as 2l. per week, may be given by
House of correction
Correction, fist established in the reign of Elizabeth, were originally designed for the penal confinement (after conviction) of paupers and vagrants refusing to work; but by 5 & 6 Wm. 4, c. 38, ss. 3, 4, reciting
Contributory
and who are liable in a secondary degree. A shareholder may sometimes avoid liability by transfer to a pauper. See Re Discoveries Finance Corporation, (1910) 1 Ch 312, but see Hyam's Case, (1859) 1 De 9 F&J
Depauperize
To free from paupers to rescue from poverty
Skilligalee
A kind of thin weak broth or oatmeal porridge served out to prisoners and paupers in England also a drink made of oatmeal sugar and water sometimes used in the English navy or
Poorhouse
A dwelling for a number of paupers maintained at public expense an almshouse a workhouse
Jukes The
investigated by R L Dugdale as an example of the inheritance of criminal and immoral tendencies disease and pauperism Sixty per cent of those traced showed degeneracy and they are estimated to have cost society 1308000 in
- ‹ Prev
- 1
- 3
- Next ›
- Last »
Try the research workspace - 7 days free