Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Dom-bec




Dom-bec

Dom-bec, Dome-book or Doom-book. A book in which Alfred the Great, of England, after uniting the Saxon heptarchy, collected the various customs dispersed through the kingdom, and digested them into one uniform code.

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Dom-bec
Dom-bec, Dome-book or Doom-book. A book in which Alfred the Great, of England, after uniting the Saxon heptarchy, collected the various customs dispersed through the kingdom, and digested them into one uniform code.

Dome-book
Dome-book, Doom-book or Dom-bec. A book in which Alfred the Great, of England, after uniting the Saxon heptarchy, collected the various customs dispersed through the kingdom, and digested them into one uniform code.

Doom-book
Doom-book, Dome-book or Dom-bec. A book in which Alfred the Great, of England, after uniting the Saxon heptarchy, collected the various customs dispersed through the kingdom, and digested them into one uniform code.

Book
A general name given to every literary composition which is printed; but appropriately to a printed composition bound in a volume.

Heptarchy
English law. The name of the kingdom or government established by the Saxons, on their establishment in Britain so called because it was composed of seven kingdoms, namely, Kent, Essex, Sussex, Wessex, East Anglia, Mercia, and Northumberland.

Customs
This term is usually applied to those taxes which are payable upon goods and merchandise imported or exported.

Kingdom
A country where an officer called a king exercises the powers of government, whether the same be absolute or limited. Wolff, Inst. Nat. 994. In some kingdoms the executive officer may be a woman, who is called a queen.

Code
Legislation. Signifies in general a collection of laws. It is a name given by way of eminence to a collection of such laws made by the legislature.



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Dolus
Civil law. A fraudulent address or trick used to deceive some one; a fraud.

Domain
It signifies sometimes, dominion, territory governed - sometimes, possession, estate - and sometimes, land about the mansion house of a lord. By domain is also understood the right to dispose at our pleasure of what belongs to us.

Domaine national
National domain. A French civil law term referring to all property and rights, moveable and immoveable, belonging to the French State, including both property forming part of the "domaine prive" and property forming part of the "domaine public" of the State.

Domaine prive
A French civil law term referring to all property of the French State which is capable of being owned, including vessels. Such property is unseizable, may be used only for its stated purpose, may never be exchanged or leased for another person's use and must be sold when it can no longer be used for the stipulated service or use.

Domaine public
Public domain. A French civil law term referring to all property of the French State which is incapable of ownership by virtue of its nature or the purpose for which the property is destined. Such property is unseizable, inalienable and imprescriptible.

Dom-bec

Dome-book
Dome-book, Doom-book or Dom-bec. A book in which Alfred the Great, of England, after uniting the Saxon heptarchy, collected the various customs dispersed through the kingdom, and digested them into one uniform code.

Domesday
Domesday or Domesday-book. An ancient record made in the time of William the Conqueror, and now remaining in the English exchequer, consisting of two volumes of unequal sizes, containing surveys of the lands in England.

Domesday-book
Domesday-book or Domesday. An ancient record made in the time of William the Conqueror, and now remaining in the English exchequer, consisting of two volumes of unequal sizes, containing surveys of the lands in England.

Domicile
The place at which a person has physical presence, which that person regards as home, and to which that person intends to return and remain even though currently residing elsewhere. The concept of domicile includes the concept of place and the concept of a settled connection with the place. A person has a settled connection with his or her domicile for legal purposes, either because that place is home or because the law has so designated that place.

Dominant
Estates. In the civil law, this term is used to signify the estate to which a servitude or easement is due from another estate.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







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