Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Flumen




Flumen

Civil law. The name of a servitude which consists in the right of turning the rain water, gathered in a spout, on another's land.

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Civil
1) It is used in contradistinction to barbarous or savage, to indicate a state of society reduced to order and regular government; thus we speak of civil life, civil society, civil government, and civil liberty. 2) It is sometimes used in contradistinction to criminal, to indicate the private rights and remedies of men, as members of the community, in contrast to those which are public and relate to the government; thus we speak of civil process and criminal process, civil jurisdiction and criminal jurisdiction.

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.

Name
One or more words used to distinguish a particular individual, as Socrates, Benjamin Franklin.

Servitude
Civil law. A term which indicates the subjection of one person to another person, or of a person to a thing, or of a thing to a person, or of a thing to a thing.

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.

Water
1) That liquid substance of which the sea, the rivers, and creeks are composed. 2) A pool of water, or a stream or water course, is considered as part of the land, hence a pool of twenty acres, would pass by the grant of twenty acres of land, without mentioning the water. 3) Like land, water is distinguishable into different parts, as the sea, rivers, docks, canals, ponds and sewers, and to these may be added at water course



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Floodgates
It was feared by Cardozo, C.J. that to grant damages for economic loss (supra) would open the floodgates to "liability in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time, to an indeterminate class".

Florin
The name of a foreign coin. In all computations of customs, the florin of the southern states of Germany, shall be estimated at forty cents; the florin of the Austrian empire, and of the city of Augshurg, at forty-eight and one-half cents.

Flotilla principle
The principle whereby the tonnage of both the tug and the tow were taken into consideration in calculating the shipowner's limitation of liability arising out of collisions between the tow and another vessel or a stationary object. The principle originally applied in England where the tug and tow belonged to the same shipowner, and even if the fault or negligence which caused the collision was committed only aboard the tug. Today, however, the combined tonnage of tug and tow are taken into consideration in calculating the shipowner's limitation in England, whether or not those vessels are commonly owned, but only if the fault or negligence that caused the collision was committed aboard both those vessels.

Flotsam
Flotsam or flotsan. A name for the goods which float upon the sea when a ship is sunk, in distinction from Jetsam and Legan.

Flotsan
Flotsan or flotsam. A name for the goods which float upon the sea when a ship is sunk, in distinction from Jetsam and Legan.

Flumen

Foedus
A league; a compact.

Foenus nauticus
1)The name given to marine interest. 2)The amount of such interest is not limited by law, because the lender runs the risk of losing, his principal.

Foeticide
Medical juridic. Recently, this term has been applied to designate the act by which criminal abortion is produced.

Foetura
Civil law. The produce of animals, and the fruit of other property, which are acquired to the owner of such animals and property, by virtue of his right.

Foetus
Medical jurisprudence. The unborn child. The name of embryo is sometimes given to it; but, although the terms are occasionally used indiscriminately, the latter is more frequently employed to designate the state of an unborn child during the first three months after conception, and by some until quickening. A foetus is sometimes described by the uncouth phrase of infant in ventre sa mere.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







lumen / fumen / flmen / fluen / flumn / flume / fflumen / fllumen / fluumen / flummen / flumeen / flumenn / rlumen / tlumen / glumen / blumen / vlumen / clumen / dlumen / elumen / foumen / fpumen / f;umen / f.umen / f,umen / fkumen / fiumen / fl7men / fl8men / flimen / flkmen / fljmen / flhmen / flymen / fl6men / flunen / flujen / fluken / flu,en / flu en / flum3n / flum4n / flumrn / flumfn / flumdn / flumsn / flumwn / flumeb / flumeh / flumej / flumem / flume /