Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Common appendant




Common appendant

English law. A right attached to arable land, and is an incident of tenure, and supposed to have originated by grant of the lord or owner of a manor or waste, in consideration of certain rents or services, or other value, to a freeholder or copyholder of plough land, and at the same time either expressly or by implication, and as of common right and necessity common appendant over his other wastes and commons.

RELATED TERMS
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Law
A rule or body of rules of conduct inherent in human nature and essential to or binding upon human society. The learned profession that is mastered by graduate study in a law school and that is responsible for the judicial system.

Right
1) Sometimes it signifies a law, as when we say that natural right requires us to keep our promises, or that it commands restitution, or that it forbids murder. In our language it is seldom used in this sense. 2) It sometimes means that quality in our actions by which they are denominated just ones. This is usually denominated rectitude. 3) It is that quality in a person by which he can do certain actions, or possess certain things which belong to him by virtue of some title. In this sense, we use it when we say that a man has a right to his estate or a right to defend himself.

Incident
A thing depending upon, appertaining to, or following another, called the princinal.

Tenure
Estates. The manner in which lands or tenements are holden. 2. According to the English law, all lands are held mediately or immediately from the king, as lord paramount and supreme proprietor of all the lands in the kingdom.

Grant
Conveyancing, concessio. Technically speaking, grants are applicable to the conveyance of incorporeal rights, though in the largest sense, the term comprehends everything that is granted or passed from one to another, and is applied to every species of property. Grant is one of the usual words in a feoffment, and differs but little except in the subject-matter; for the operative words used in grants are dedi et concessi, "have given and granted."

Lord
In England, this is a title of honor. In the U. S. no such titles are allowed

Owner
Property. The owner is he who has dominion of a thing real or person-al, corporeal or incorporeal, which he has a right to enjoy and to do with as he pleases, even to spoil or destroy it, as far as the law permits, unless he be prevented by some agreement or covenant which restrains his right.

Manor
Estates. This word is derived from the French manoir, and signifies, a house, residence, or habitation. At present its meaning is more enlarged, and includes not only a dwelling-house, but also lands.

Waste
The abuse, destruction or permanent change to property by one who is merely in possesion of it as in the case of a tenant or a life tenant.

Consideration
Under common law, there can be no binding contract without consideration, which was defined in an 1875 English decision as "some right, interest, profit or benefit accruing to the one party, or some forbearance, detriment, loss or responsibility given, suffered or undertaken by the other". Common law did not want to allow gratuitous offers, those made without anything offered in exchange (such as gifts), to be given the protection of contract law. So they added the criteria of consideration. Consideration is not required in contracts made in civil law systems and many common law states have adopted laws which remove consideration as a prerequisite of a valid contract.

Value
Common law. This term has two different meanings. It sometimes expresses the utility of an object, and some times the power of purchasing other good with it. The first may be called value in use, the latter value in exchange.

Freeholder
A person who is the owner of a freehold estate.

Time
Contracts, evidence, practice. The measure of duration., It is divided into years, months. days, hours, minutes, and seconds. It is also divided into day and night. 2) Pleading. The avertment of time is generally necessary in pleading; the rules are different, in different actions.

Implication
An inference of something not directly declared, but arising from what is admitted or expressed.

Common
marriage law. a marriage in which no formal ceremony took place and no license exists.

Necessity
In general, whatever makes the contrary of a thing impossible, whatever may be the cause of such impossibilities,

Commons
English law. Those subjects of the English nation who are not noblemen.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Command
1) It signifies an order; an apprentice is bound to obey the lawful command of his master; a constable may command rioters to keep the peace. 2) He who commands another to do an unlawful act, is accessary to it. 3) Command is also equivalent to deputation or voluntary substitution; as, when a master employs one to do a thing, he is said to have Commanded him to do it; and he is responsible accordingly.

Commandos (prison)
In the US penitentiary slang, prisoners who go to another prisoners bunk or cell, after lights out, for sexual reasons.

Commencement of a suit or action
The suit is considered as commenced from the issuing of the writ;

Commendatary
A person who holds a church living or presentment in commendam.

Commendation
The act of recommending, praising. A merchant who merely commends goods he offers for sale, does not by that act warrant them, unless there is some fraud: simplex commendatio non obligat.

Commendators
Ecclesiastical law. Secular persons upon whom ecclesiastical benefices are bestowed, because they were commended and instructed to their oversight: they are merely trustees.

Commerce
Latin commercium. In its simplest signification, an exchange of goods; but in the advancement of society, labor, transportation, itelligence, care and various mediums of exchange, become commodities and enter into commerce. Gibbens v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 229 (1824), Marshall, Chief Justice. The interchange or mutual change of goods, productions, or property of any kind, between nations or individuals.

Commercial bribery
Giving and accepting payments to favor or not favor a commercial transaction or relationship.

Commercial litigation
Litigation provoked by a commercial dispute.

Commissariate
The whole body of officers who act in the department of the commissary, are called the, commissariate.

Commissary
An officer whose principal duties are to supply the army witli provisions.

Commissary (prison)
In the US penitentiary jargon, the jail store for inmates, which provides food and hygiene items, correspondence material, tennis shoes, reading glasses, phone cards and over-the-counter medication.ÿ

Commission
1) Contracts, civil law. When one undertakes, without reward, to do something for another in respect to a thing bailed. This term is frequently used synonymously with mandate. 2) Criminal law. The act of perpetrating an offence. 3) Office. Persons authorized to act in a certain matter. 4) practice. An instrument issued by a court of, justice, or other competent tribunal, to authorize a person to take depositions, or do any other act by authority of such court, or tribunal, is called a commission. 5) Government. Letters-patent granted by the government, under the public seal, to a person appointed to an office, giving him authority to perform the duties of his office.

Commission merchant
One employed to sell goods for another on commission; a factor. He is sometimes called. a consignee, and the goods he receives are a consignment.

Commission of lunacy
A writ issued out of chancery, or such court as may have jurisdiction of the case directed to a proper officer, to inquire whether a person named therein is a lunatic or not.

Commission of reb ellion
Chan. prac. The name of a writ issuing out of chancery, generally directed to four special commissioners, named by the plaintiff, commanding them to attach the defendant wheresoever he may be found within the state, as a rebel and contemner of the law

Commission of rebellion
A commission of rebellion is the name of a writ issuing out of chancery to compel the defendant to appear.

Commissioner
Officer. One who has a lawful commission to execute a public office.

Commissioner of patents
The name of an officer of the United States whose duties are detailed in the act to promote the useful arts which will be found under the article Patent.

Commissioners of bail
Practice. Officers appointed by some courts to take recognizances of bail in civil cases.

Commissioners of sewers
English law. Officers whose duty it is to repair sea banks aud walls, survey rivers, public streams, ditches

Commit
To send a person to prison, asylum, or reformatory by a court order.

Committee
1) Legislation. One or more members of a legislative body to whom is specially referred some matter before that body, in order that they may investigate and examine into it and report to those who delegated this authority to them. 2) When a person has been found non compos, the law requires that a guardian should be appointed to take care of his person and estate; this guardian is called the committee.

Committitur piece
English law. An instrument in writing, on paper or parchment, which charges a person already in prison, in execution at the suit of, the person who arrested him.

Commixtion
Civil law. This term is used to signify the act by which goods are mixed together.

Commodate
Contracts. A term used in the Scotch law, which is synonymous to the Latin commodatum, or loan for use.

Commodatum
A contract, by which one of the parties binds himself to return to the other certain personal chattels which the latter delivers to him, to be used by him, without reward; loan -for use.

Commodity
Convenience, privilege, profit, gain; popularity, goods, wares, merchandise.

Commodum
Latin. Convenience, benefit, advantage.

Common
marriage law. a marriage in which no formal ceremony took place and no license exists.

Common appurtenant
English law. A right granted by deed, by the owner of waste or other land, to another person, owner of other land, to have his cattle, or a particular description of cattle

Common assurances
Title by deeds are so called, because, it is said, every man ' s estate is assured to him; these deed's or instruments operate either as conveyances or as charges.

Common bail
The formal entry of fictitious sureties in the proper office of the court, which is called filing common bail to the action.

Common bar
Pleading. A plea to compel the plaintiff to assign the particular place where the trespass has been Committed.

Common bench
Bancus communis. The court of common pleas was anciently called common bench, because the pleas and controversies there determined were between common persons.

Common carriage
Carriage performed by a "common carrier", who undertakes to transport the public's goods from and to places advertised and at times advertised, usually on regular, "liner" (infra) routes and under "liner" bills of lading, in consideration of the payment of freight (infra) by the shipper (infra). Common carriage is the opposite of private carriage.

Common council
In many cities the charter provides for their government, in imitation of the national and state governments.

Common counts
Certain general counts, not founded on any special contract, which are introduced in a declaration, for the purpose of preventing a defeat of a just right by the accidental variance of the evidence.

Common fishery
A fishery to which all persons have a right, such as the cod fisheries off Newfoundland.

Common highway
By this term is meant a road to be used by the community at large for any purpose of transit or traffic.

Common home state exception
If the perpetrator of the delict and the victim have a domicile or residence in the same country, the law of that country applies. "In any case where the person who committed the injurious act and the victim have their domiciles or residences in the same country, the law of that country applies."

Common informer
One who, without being specially required by law, or by virtue of his office, gives information of crimes, offences or misdemeanors, which have been committed, in order to prosecute the offenders; a prosecutor.

Common intent
Construction. The natural sense given to words.

Common law
That which derives its force and authority from the universal consent and immemorial practice of the people.

Common law marriage
A marriage under common law (see).

Common nuisance
One which affects the public in general, and not merely some particular person.

Common pleas
1) The name of a court having jurisdiction generally of civil actions. 2) By common pleas, is also understood, such pleas or actions as are brought by private persons against private persons; or by the government, when the cause of action is of a civil nature.

Common recovery
A judgment recovered in a fictitious suit, brought against the tenant of the freehold, in consequence of a default made by the person who is last vouched to warranty in the suit. A common recovery is a kind of conveyance.

Common scold
Crim. law, communes rixatrix. A woman, who, in consequence of her boisterous, disorderly and quarrelsome tongue, is a public nuisance to the neighborhood.

Common seal
A seal used by a corporation.

Common sense
Medical jurisprudence. When a person possesses those perceptions, associations and judgments, in relation to persons and things, which agree with those of the generality of mankind, he is said to possess common sense.

Common share
The basic share in a company. Typically, common shares have voting rights and a pro rata right to any dividends declared. They differ from preferred shares which, by definition, carry some kind of right or privilege above the common shares (eg. first to receive any dividends).

Common traverse
This kind of traverse differs from those called technical traverses principally in this, that it is preceded by no inducement general or special; it is taken without an absque hoc, or any similar words, and is simply a direct denial of the adverse allegations, in common language, and always concludes to the country.

Common venture
A basic theme in maritime law, reflecting the understanding of maritime commerce as a joint undertaking on the part of shippers (infra), carriers (supra) and consignees (infra); shipowners and charterers; and their respective insurers, who (directly or indirectly) confront the perils of the sea together, and who should therefore share both the profits and the risks attendant upon their combined operation.

Common vouchee
In common recoveries, the person who vouched to warranty. In this fictitious proceeding, the crier of the court usually performs the office of a common vouchee.

Common, tenants in
Tenants in common are such as hold an estate, real or personal, by several distinct titles, but by a unity of possession.

Commonalty
English law. 1) The common people of England, as contradistinguished from the king and the nobles; 2) The body of a society as the masters, wardens, and commonalty of such a society.

Commoner
One who is entitled with others to the use of a common.

Commons
English law. Those subjects of the English nation who are not noblemen.

Commonwealth
Government. A commonwealth is properly a free state, or republic, having a popular or representative government.

Commorancy
Persons. An abiding dwelling, or continuing as an inhabitant in any place. It consists, properly, in sleeping usually in one place.

Commorant
One residing or inhabiting a particular place.

Commorientes
This Latin word signifies those wbo die at the same time, as, for example, by shipwreck.

Communication
Contracts. Information; consultation; conference.

Communings
Scotch law. This term is used to express the negotiations which have taken place before making a contract, in relation thereto.

Communio bonorum
Civil law. Common goods.

Community property
All income or property that was acquired during the marriage, with exception to gifts or inheritances.

Community residential programs
In the United States, programs for prison inmates to do community service.

Commutation
Punishments. The change of a punishment to which a person has been condemned into a less severe one.

Commutations and pardons
In the United States, under the authority of each state's constitution, the governor has the power to grant executive clemency through pardons and commutations.

Commutative contract
Civil law. One in which each of the contracting parties gives and, receives an equivalent.

Commutative justice
That virtue whose object is, to render to every one what belongs to him, as nearly as may be, or that which governs contracts.



PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
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Commodate
Contracts. A term used in the Scotch law, which is synonymous to the Latin commodatum, or loan for use.

Commodatum
A contract, by which one of the parties binds himself to return to the other certain personal chattels which the latter delivers to him, to be used by him, without reward; loan -for use.

Commodity
Convenience, privilege, profit, gain; popularity, goods, wares, merchandise.

Commodum
Latin. Convenience, benefit, advantage.

Common
marriage law. a marriage in which no formal ceremony took place and no license exists.

Common appendant

Common appurtenant
English law. A right granted by deed, by the owner of waste or other land, to another person, owner of other land, to have his cattle, or a particular description of cattle

Common assurances
Title by deeds are so called, because, it is said, every man ' s estate is assured to him; these deed's or instruments operate either as conveyances or as charges.

Common bail
The formal entry of fictitious sureties in the proper office of the court, which is called filing common bail to the action.

Common bar
Pleading. A plea to compel the plaintiff to assign the particular place where the trespass has been Committed.

Common bench
Bancus communis. The court of common pleas was anciently called common bench, because the pleas and controversies there determined were between common persons.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







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