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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  • LEVIR
    In Roman law. A husband's brother; a wife's brother-in-law. Calvin.
  • LEVIS
    Lat. Light; slight; trifling. Levis culpa, slight fault or neglect. Levis-sima culpa, the slightest neglect Levis note, a slight mark or brand. See Brand v. Schenectady ft T. R. Co., 8 Barb. (N. Y.) 378.
  • LEVITICAL DEGREES
    Degrees of kindred within which persons are prohibited to marry. They are set forth in the eighteenth chapter of Leviticus.
  • LEVY
    v. To raise; execute; exact; collect; gather; take up; seize. Thus, to levy (raise or collect) a tax; to levy (raise or set up) a nuisance; to levy (acknowledge) a fine; to. levy (inaugurate) war; to levy an execution, i.e., to levy or collect a sum of money on an More...
  • LEVY
    n. In practice. A seizure; the raising of the money for which an execution has been issued. -Equitable levy. The lien in equity created by the filing of a creditors bill to subject real property of the debtor, and of a lis pendens, is sometimes so called. Miller v. Sherry, More...
  • LEVY COURT
    A court formerly existing in the District of Columbia. It was a body charged with the administration of the ministerial and financial duties of Washington county. It was charged with the duty of laying out and repairing roads, building bridges, providing poor-houses, laying and collecting the taxes necessary to enable More...
  • LEVYING WAR
    In criminal law. The assembling of a body of men for the purpose of effecting by force a treasonable object; and all who perform any part, however minute, or however remote from the scene of action, and who are leagued in the general conspiracy, are considered as engaged in levying More...
  • LEWDNESS
    Licentiousness; an offense against the public economy, when of an an open and notorious character; as by frequenting houses of 111 fame, which is au indictable offense, or by some grossly scandalous and public indecency, for which the punishment at common law is fine and imprisonment. Wharton. See Brooks v. More...
  • LEX
    Lat. In the Roman law. Law; a law; the law. This term was often used as the synonym of jus, in the sense of a rule of civil conduct authoritatively prescribed for the government of the actions of the members of an organized jural society. In a more limited and More...
  • LEY
    L. Fr. Law; the law. -Ley oivile. In old English law. The civil or Roman law. Yearb. H. 8 Edw. III. 42. Otherwise termed "ley escripte," the written law. Yearb. 10 Edw. III. 24.-Ley gager. Law wager: wager of law; the giving of gage or security by a defendant that More...
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