Legal Term Dictionary

Search our free database of thousands of legal terms. The easiest-to-read, most user-friendly guide to legal terms.This dictionary is from the early 20th century and is not to be construed as legal advice.

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  • BOUCHE OF COURT, OR BUDGE OF COURT
    A certain allowance of provision from the king to his knights and servants, who attended him on any military expedition.
  • BOUGH OF A TREE
    In feudal law. A symbol which gave seisin of land, to hold of the donor in capite.
  • BOUGHT AND SOLD NOTES
    When a broker is employed to buy and sell goods, he is accustomed to give to the buyer a note of the sale, commonly called a "sold note," and to the seller a like note, commonly called a "bought note," in his own name, as agent of each, and thereby More...
  • BOULEVARD
    The word "boulevard," which originally indicated a bulwark or rampart, and was afterwards applied to a public walk or road on the site of a demolished fortification, is now employed in the same sense as public drive. A park is a piece of ground adapted and set apart for purposes More...
  • BOUND
    As an adjective, denotes the condition of being constrained by the obligations of a bond or a covenant In the law of shipping, "bound to" or "bound for" denotes that the vessel spoken of is intended or designed to make a voyage to the place named. As a noun, the More...
  • BOUND BAILIFFS
    In English law. Sheriffs' officers are so called, from their being usually bound to the sheriff in an obligation with sureties, for the due execution of their office. 1 Bl. Comm. 345, 346.
  • BOUNDARY
    By boundary is understood, in general, every separation, natural or artificial, which marks the confines or line of division of two contiguous estates. Trees or hedges may be planted, ditches may be dug, walls or inclosures may be erected, to serve as boundaries. But we most usually understand by boundaries More...
  • BOUNDED TREE
    A tree marking or standing at the corner of a field or estate.
  • BOUNDERS
    In American law. Visible marks or objects at the ends of the lines drawn in surveys of land, showing the courses and distances. Burrill.
  • BOUNDS
    In the English law of mines, the trespass committed by a person who excavates minerals under-ground beyond the boundary of his land is called "working out of bounds."
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