![]() |
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Dung
DungManure. Sometimes it is real estate, and at other times personal property. RELATED TERMS-------------------------------------- Manure Dung. When collected in a heap, it is considered as personal property, but, when spread, it becomes a part of the land and acquires the character of real estate. Real 1) A term which is applied to land in its most enlarged signification. Real security, therefore, means the security of mortgages or other incumbrances affecting lands. 2) In the civil law, real has not the same meaning as it has in the common law. There it signifies what relates to a thing, whether it be movable or immovable, lands or goods; thus, a real injury is one which is done to a thing, as a trespass to property, whether it be real or personal in the common law sense. A real statute is one which relates to a thing, in contradistinction to such as relate to a person. Estate A right or interest in property or the property of a deceased person. Personal Belonging to the person. Property Property is commonly thought of as a thing which belongs to someone and over which a person has total control. But, legally, it is more properly defined as a collection of legal rights over a thing. These rights are usually total and fully enforceable by the state or the owner against others. It has been said that "property and law were born and die together. Before laws were made there was no property. Take away laws and property ceases." before laws were written and enforced, property had no relevance. Possession was all that mattered. There are many classifications of property, the most common being between real property or immoveable property (real estate such as land or buildings) and "chattel", or "moveable" (things which are not attached to the land such as a bicycle, a car or a hammer) and between public (property belonging to everybody or to the state) and private property. SIMILAR TERMS-------------------------------------- PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS-------------------------------------- Dum vidua Latin: for so long as she remains a widow. Dumb One who cannot speak; a person who is mute. Dumb-bidding Contracts. In sales at auction, when the amount which the owner of the thing sold is willing to take for the article, is written, and placed by the owner under a candlestick, or other thing, and it is agreed that no bidding shall avail unless equal to that; this is called dumbidding. Dummy Fictitious. Dumpster diving Rummaging through someone's trash to obtain information. Dung Dungeon A cell under ground; a place in a prison built under ground, dark, or but indifferently lighted. Dunnage Merchant law. Pieces of wood placed against the sides and bottom of the hold of a vessel, to preserve the cargo from the effect of leakage, according to its nature and quality. Dupex querela English ecclesiastical law. A complaint in the nature of an appeal from the ordinary to his next immediate superior. Duplex A house which has separate but complete facilities to accommodate two families as either adjacent units or one on top of the other. Duplicata It is the double of letters patent, letters of administration, or other instrument. We thank you for using the Juridical Dictionary to search for Dung. If you have a better definition for Dung than the one presented here, please let us know by making use of the suggest a term option. This definition of Dung may be disputed by other professionals. Our attempt is to provide easy definitions on Dung and any other medical topic for the public at large.
|
|||||||||||||||
| © Juridical Dictionary 2005. All rights reserved. | ||||||||||||||||
| ung / dng / dug / dun / ddung / duung / dunng / dungg / eung / rung / fung / vung / cung / xung / sung / wung / d7ng / d8ng / ding / dkng / djng / dhng / dyng / d6ng / dubg / duhg / dujg / dumg / du g / dunt / | ||||||||||||||||