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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  • DISSOLUTION
    In contracts. The dissolution of a contract is the cancellation or abrogation of it by the parties themselves, with tbe effect of annulling the binding force of the agreement, and restoring each party to his original rights. In this sense it is frequently used In the phrase "dissolution of a More...
  • DISSOLUTION OF PARLIAMENT
    The crown may dissolve parliament either In person or by proclamation; the dissolution is usually by proclamation, after a prorogation. No parliament may last for a longer period than seven years. Septennial Act, 1 Geo. I. c. 38. Under 6 Anne, c. 37, upon a demise of. the crown, parliament More...
  • DISSOLVE
    To terminate; abrogate; cancel; annul; disintegrate. To release or unloose the binding force of anything. As to "dissolve a corporation," to "dissolve an injunction." See DISSOLUTION.
  • DISSOLVING BOND
    A bond given to obtain the dissolution of a legal writ or process, particularly an attachment or an injunction, and conditioned to indemnify the opposite party or to abide the judgment to be given. See Sanger v. Hibbard, 2 Ind. T. 547, 53 S. W. 330.
  • DISSUADE
    In criminal law. To advise and procure a person not to do an act. To dissuade a witness from giving evidence against a person Indicted is an indictable offense at common law. Hawk. P. C. b. 1, c 21, | 15.
  • DISTILL
    To subject to a process of distillation, i. e., vaporizing the more volatile parts of a substance and then condensing the vapor so formed. In law, the term is chiefly used in connection with the manufacture of intoxicating liquors. -Distilled liquor or distilled spirits. A term which includes all potable More...
  • DISTINCTE ET APERTE
    In old English practice. Distinctly and openly. Formal words in writs of error, referring to the return required to be made td them. Reg. Orig. 17. Distinguenda sunt tempore. The time Is to 'be considered. 1 Coke, 16a;' Bloss y. Tobey, 2 Pick. (Mass.) 327; Owens v. Missionary Society; 14 More...
  • DISTINGUISH
    To point out an essential difference; to prove a case cited as applicable, inapplicable.
  • DISTRACTED PERSON
    A term used in the statutes of Illinois (Rey. Laws, Hi. 1833, p. 332) and New Hampshire (Dig. X. H. Laws, 1830, p. 339) to express a state of Insanity. Snyder v. Snyder, 142 111. 60, 31 N. E. 303.
  • DISTRACTIO
    Lat. In tbe civil law. A separation or division into parts; also an alienation or sale. Sometimes applied to the act of a guardian in appropriating the property of his ward. -Distraetio bonorum. The sale at retail of the property of an insolvent estate, under the management of a curator More...
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