Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Eat inde sine die






Eat inde sine die

Words used on an acquittal, or when a prisoner is to be discharged, that he may go without day, that is, that he be dismissed.

RELATED TERMS
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Acquittal
1) Contracts. A release or discharge from an obligation orengagement. 2) Crim. law practice. The absolution of a party charged with a crime or misdemeanor.

When
1) At which time, in wills, standing by itself unqualified and unexplained, this is a word of condition denoting the time at which the gift is to continence. 2) The context of a will may show that the word when is to be applied to the possession only, not to the vesting of a legacy; but to justify this construction, there must be circumstances, or other expressions in the will, showing such to have been the testator's intent.

Prisoner
One held in confinement against his will.

Discharged
Released, or liberated from custody.

Without
Pleading. This word is adopted in formal traverses, and is a negative signifying "and not for;" accordingly the language of the elder entries sometimes is, It et nemy pur tiel cause.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Earnest
Contracts. The payment of a part of the price of goods sold, or the delivery of part of such goods, for the purpose of binding the contract.

Ear-witness
One who attests to things he has heard himself.

Easement
A right of passage over a neighbor's land or waterway. An easement is a type of servitude. For every easement, there is a dominant and a servient tenement. Easements are also classified as negative (which prevents the servient land owner from doing certain things) or affirmative easements (the most common, which allows the beneficiary of the easement to do certain things, such as a right-of-way). Although right-of-ways are the most common easements, there are many others such as rights to tunnel under another's land, to use a washroom, to emit smoke or fumes, to pass over with transmission towers, to access a dock and to access a well.

Easements
Estates. An easement is defined to be a liberty privilege or advantage, which one man may have in the lands of another, without profit; it may arise by deed or prescription.

Easter term
English law. One of the four terms of the courts. It is now a fixed term beginning on the 15th of April and ending the 8th of May in every year. It was formerly a movable term.

Eat inde sine die

Eaves-droppers
Criminal law. Persons as wait under walls or windows or the eaves of a house, to listen to discourses, and thereupon to frame mischievous tales.

Ecchymosis
Medical jurisprudence. Blackness. It is an extravasation of blood by rupture of capillary vessels, and hence it follows contusion; but it may exist, as in cases of scurvy, and other morbid conditions, without the latter.

Ecclesia
In classical Greek this word signifies any assembly. But ordinarily, in the New Testament, the word denotes a Christian assembly, and is rendered into English by the word church.

Ecclesiastic
A clergyman; one destined to the divine ministry, as, a bishop, a priest, a deacon.

Ecclesiastical
Belonging to, or set apart for the church.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.