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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  • CHANCE
    In criminal law. An accident; an unexpected, unforeseen, or unintended consequence of an act; a fortuitous event The opposite of intention, design, or contrivance. There is a wide difference between chance and accident. The one is the intervention of some unlooked-for circumstance to prevent an expected result; the other is More...
  • CHANCE-MEDLEY.
    In criminal law. A sudden affray. This word is sometimes applied to any kind of homicide by misadventure, but in strictness it is applicable to such killing only as happens in defending one's self. 4 Bl. Comm. 184.
  • CHANCEL
    In ecclesiastical law. The part of a church in which the communion table stands; it belongs to the rector or the Impropriator. 2 Broom & II. Comm. 420.
  • CHANCELLOR
    In American law, this is the name given in some states to the judge (or the presiding judge) of a court of chancery. In England, m besides being the designation of the chief Judge of the court of chancery, the term is used as the title of several judicial officers More...
  • CHANCELLOR'S COURTS IN THE TWO UNIVERSITIES
    In English law. Courts of local jurisdiction in and for the two universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England.
  • CHANCERY
    Equity; equitable jurisdiction; a court of equity; the system of jurisprudence administered in courts of equity. Kenyon v. Kenyon, 3 Utah, 431, 24 Pac. 82!); Sullivan v. Thomas, 3 Rich. (S. C.) 531. Sec COURT OF CHANCERY.
  • CHANGE
    1. An alteration; substitution of one thing for another. This word does not connote either improvement or deterioration as a result In this respect it differs from amendment, which, in law, always imports a change for the better. 2. Exchange of money against money of a different denomination. Also small More...
  • CHANGER
    An officer formerly belonging to the king's mint in England, whose business was chiefly to exchange coin for bullion brought in by merchants and others.
  • CHANNEL
    This term refers rather to the bed in which the main stream of a river flows than to the deep water of the stream as followed In navigation. Bridge Co. v. Dubuque County, 55 Iowa, 558, 8 N. W. 448. See The Oliver (D. C.) 22 Fed. 849; Iowa v. More...
  • CHANTER
    The chief singer in the choir of a cathedral. Mentioned in 13 Eliz. c 10.
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