Legal Term Dictionary

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  • CIVILISTA
    In old English law; A clvU lawyer, or civilian. Dyer, 267.
  • CIVILITER
    Civilly. In a person's civil character or position, or by civil (not criminal) process or procedure. This term is used in distinction or opposition to the word "criminaliter"—criminally,—to distinguish civil actions from criminal prosecutions. —Civilitcr mortnns. Civilly dead; dead in the view of the law. The condition of one who More...
  • CIVILIZATION
    In practice. A law; an act of Justice, or judgment which renders a criminal process civil; performed by turning an information into an inquest, or the contrary. Wharton. In pnblic law. This is a term which covers several states of society; it is relative, and has not a fixed sense, More...
  • CIVIS
    Lat In the Roman law. A citizen; as distinguished from incola, (an inhabitant;) origin or birth constituting the former, domicile the latter. Code, 10, 40, 7. And see U. & v. Rhodes, 27 Fed. Cas. 788.
  • CIVITAS
    Lat. In the Roman law. Any body of people living under the same laws; a state. Jus civitatis, the law of a state; civil law. Inst 1, 2, 1, 2. Civitates f&deratas, towns In alliance with Rome, and considered to be free. Butl. Hor. Jur. 29. Citizenship; one of the More...
  • CLAIM
    v. To demand as one's own; to assert a personal right to any property or any right; to demand the possession or enjoyment of something rightfully one's own, and wrongfully withheld. Hill v. Henry, 66 N. J. Eq. 150, 57 Atl. 555.
  • CLAIM
    n, 1. A challenge of the property or ownership of a thing which is wrongfully withheld from the possession of the claimant. Stowel v. Zouch, Plowd. 359; Robinson v. Wiley, 15 N. Y. 491; Fordyce v. Godman, 20 Ohio St 14; Douglas v. Beasley, 40 Ala. 147; Prigg v. Pennsylvania, More...
  • CLAIMANT
    In admiralty practice. The name given to a person.who lays claim to property seized on a libel in rem, and who is authorized and admitted to defend the action. The Conqueror, 166 U. S. 110, 17 Sup. Ct 510, 41 IA Ed. 937.
  • CLAM
    Lat. In the civil law. Covertly; secretly. —Clam, vi, ant preoario. A technical phrase of the Roman law, meaning by force, stealth, or importunity. Clam delinqnentes magls pnninntnr qnam palam. 8 Coke, 127. Those sinning secretly are punished more severely than those sinning openly.
  • CLAMEA ADMITTENDA IN ITINERE PER ATTORNATUM
    An ancient writ by which the king commanded the justices in eyre to admit the claim by attorney of a person who was in the royal service, and could not appear In person. Reg. Orig. 19.
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