Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Induction




Induction

Ecclesiastical law. The giving a clerk, instituted to a benefice, the actual possession of its temporalties, in the nature of livery of seisin.

RELATED TERMS
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Ecclesiastical
Belonging to, or set apart for the church.

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.

Clerk
1) Commerce, contract. A person in the employ of a merchant, who attends only to a part of his business, while the merchant himself superintends the whole. 2) Ecclesiastical law. Every individual, who is attached to the ecclesiastical state, and who has submitted to the ceremony of the tonsure, is a clerk. 3) A person employed in an office, public or private, for keeping records or accounts. His business is to write or register, in proper form, the transactions of the tribunal or body to which he belongs. Some clerks, however, have little or no writing to do in their offices, as, the clerk of the market, whose duties are confined chiefly to superintending the markets.

Benefice
Ecclesiastical law. In its most extended sense, any ecclesiastical preferment or dignity.

Actual
Real; actual.

Possession
International law. By possession is meant a country which is held by no other title than mere conquest.

Livery
English law. 1) The delivery of possession of lands to those tenants who hold of the king in capite, or knight's service. 2) Livery was also the name of a writ which lay for the heir of age, to obtain the possession of seisin of his lands at the king's hands. 3) It signifies, in the third place, the clothes given by a nobleman or gentleman to his servant.

Seisin
Estates. The possession of an estate of freebold.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Inducement
1) Pleading. The statement of matter which is introductory to the principal subject of the declaration or plea, but which is necessary to explain and elucidate it; 2) Contracts, evidence. The moving cause of an action. In contracts, the benefit.which the obligor is to receive is the inducement to making them.

Induclae legales
Scotch law. The days between the citation of the defendant, and the day of appearance. The days between the test and the return day of the writ.

Indulgence
A favor granted. It is a general rule that where a creditor gives .indulgence, by entering into a binding contract with a principal debtor, by which the surety is or may be damnified, such surety is discharged, because the creditor has put it out of his power to enforce immediate payment; when the surety would have a right to require him to do so.

Industrial tribunal
Industrial Tribunals have powers to hear unfair dismissal, discrimination and other cases in relation to statutory employment rights as well as some breach of contract actions.



PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
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Indorsee
Contracts. The person in whose favor an indorsement is made.

Indorsement
1) Criminal law, practice. When a warrant for the arrest of a person charged with a crime has been issued by a justice of the peace of one county, which is to be executed in another county, it is necessary in some states, as in Pennsylvania, that it should be indorsed by a justice of the county where it is to be executed: this indorsement is called backing. 2) Contracts. In its most general acceptation, it is what is written on the back of an instrument of writing, and which has relation to it; an assignment on a promissory note.

Indorser
Contracts. The person who makes an indorsement.

Inducement
1) Pleading. The statement of matter which is introductory to the principal subject of the declaration or plea, but which is necessary to explain and elucidate it; 2) Contracts, evidence. The moving cause of an action. In contracts, the benefit.which the obligor is to receive is the inducement to making them.

Induclae legales
Scotch law. The days between the citation of the defendant, and the day of appearance. The days between the test and the return day of the writ.

Induction

Indulgence
A favor granted. It is a general rule that where a creditor gives .indulgence, by entering into a binding contract with a principal debtor, by which the surety is or may be damnified, such surety is discharged, because the creditor has put it out of his power to enforce immediate payment; when the surety would have a right to require him to do so.

Industrial tribunal
Industrial Tribunals have powers to hear unfair dismissal, discrimination and other cases in relation to statutory employment rights as well as some breach of contract actions.

Ineligibility
The incapacity to be lawfully elected.

Inevitable accident
A term used in the civil law, nearly synonymous with fortuitous. event. In the common law commonly called the ad of God.

Infamis
Among the Romans was of a general rule, and not by virtue of an arbitrary decision of the censors, lost his political rights, but preserved his civil rights.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







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