Legal Term Dictionary

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  • FI. FA.
    An abbreviation for fieri facias, (which see.)
  • FIANCER
    L. Fr: To pledge one's faith. Kelham.
  • FIANZA
    Sp. In Spanish law, trust, confidence, and correlatively a legal duty or obligation arising therefrom. The term is sufficiently broad in meaning to include both a general obligation and a restricted liability under a single instrument Martinez v. Run-kle. 57 N. J. Law, 111, 30 Atl. 593. But in a More...
  • FIAR
    In Scotch law. He that has the fee or feu. The proprietor is termed 4*flar," in contradistinction to the life-renter. 1 Karnes, Eq. Pref. One whose property is charged with a life-rent
  • FIARS PRICES
    The value of grain In the different counties of Scotland, fixed yearly by the respective sheriffs, in the month of February* with the assistance of juries. These regulate the prices of grain stipulated to be sold at the flar prices, or when no price bas been stipulated. Ersk. 1, 4, More...
  • FIAT
    (Lat. "Let it be done.") In English practice. A short ortier or warrant of a judge or magistrate directing some act to be done; an authority issuing from some competent source for the doing of some legal act. One of the proceedings in the English bankrupt practice, being a power, More...
  • FICTIO
    In Roman law. A fiction; an assumption or supposition of the law. "Fictio" in the old Roman law was properly a term of pleading, and signified a false averment on the part of the plaintiff which the defendant was not allowed to traverse; as that the plaintiff was a Roman More...
  • FICTION
    An assumption or supposition of law that something which is or may be false is true, or that a state of facts exists 'which has never really taken place. New Hampshire Strafford Bank v. Cornell, 2 N. H. 324; Hibberd v. Smith, 67 Cal. 547, 4 Pac. 473, 56 Am. More...
  • FICTITIOUS
    Founded on a fiction; haying the character of a fiction; false, feigned, or pretended. -?Fictitious action. An action brought for the sole purpose of obtaining the opinion of the court on a point of law, not for the settlement of any actual controversy between the parties. Smith v. Junction Ry. More...
  • FIDE-COMMISSARY
    A term derived from the Latin "fidei-commissarius" and occasionally used by writers on equity jurisprudence as a substitute for the law French term "cestui que trust" as being more elegant and euphonious. See Brown v. Brown, 83 Hun, 160, 31 N. Y. Supp. 650.
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