Legal Term Dictionary

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  • CON BUENA FE
    In Spanish law. With (or in) good faith.
  • CONACRE
    In Irish practice. The payment of wages in land, the rent being worked out in labor at a money valuation. Wharton. Conatus quid sit, non deflnitur in jure. 2 Bulst. 277. What an attempt is, is not defined in law.
  • CONCEAL
    To hide; secrete; withhold from the knowledge of others. The word "conceal," according to the best lexicographers, signifies to withhold or keep secret mental facts from another's knowledge, as well as to hide or secrete physical objects from sight or observation. Gerry v. Dunham, 57 Me. 339. —Conoealed. The term More...
  • CONCEDER
    Fr. In French law. To grant See CONCESSION.
  • CONCEDO
    Lat. I grant A word used in old Anglo-Saxon grants, and in statutes merchant
  • CONCEPTION
    In medical jurisprudence, the beginning of pregnancy, (q. v.)
  • CONCEPTUM
    In the civil law. A theft (furtum) was called "conceptum" when the thing stolen was searched for, and found upon some person in the presence of witnesses. Inst 4, 1, 4.
  • CONCERNING, CONCERNED
    Relating to; pertaining to;' affecting; involving; being engaged in or taking part in. U. S. v. Fulkerson (D. C.) 74 Fed. 631; May v. Brown, 3 Barn. & C. J37; Ensworth v. Holly, 33 Mo. 370; Miller v. Navigation Co., 32 W. Va. 46, 9 S. E. 57; TJ.'S. v. More...
  • CONCESSI
    Lat. I have granted. At common law, in a feoffment or estate of inheritance, this word does not imply a warranty ; it only creates a covenant in a lease for years. Co. Litt 384«. See Kinney v. Watts, 14 Wend. (N. Y.) 40; Koch v. Hustis, 113 Wis. 599, More...
  • CONCESSIMUS
    Lat. We have granted. A term used in conveyances, the effect of which was to create a joint covenant on the part of the grantors.
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