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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  • SHIPPED
    This term, in common maritime and commercial usage, means "placed on board of a vessel for the purchaser or consignee, to be transported at his risk." Fisher v. Minot, 10 Gray (Mass.) 262. 1. The owner of goods who intrusts them on board a vessel for delivery abroad, by charter-party More...
  • SHIPWRECK
    The demolition or shattering of a vessel, caused by her driving ashore or on rocks and shoals In the mid-* seas, or by the violence of winds and waves In tempests. 2 Arn. Ins. p. 734. o SHIRE. In English law. A county. So called because every county or shire More...
  • SHIPPING
    Ships in general; ships or vessels of any kind intended for navigation. Relating to ships; as, shipping interest, ship* ping affairs, shipping business, shipping concerns. Putting on board a ship or vessel, or receiving on board a ship or vessel. Webster; Worcester: The "law of shipping" is a comprehensive term More...
  • SHOCK
    In medical jurisprudence. A sudden and severe depression of the vital functions, particularly of the nerves and the circulation, due to the nervous exhaustion following trauma, surgical operation, or sudden and violent emotion, resulting (if not in death) in more or less prolonged prostration; it Is spoken of as being More...
  • SHOOFAA
    In Mohammedan law. Preemption, or a power of possessing property which has been sold, by paying a sum equal to that paid by the purchaser. Wharton.
  • SHOP
    A building in which goods and merchandise are sold at retail, or where mechanics work, and sometimes keep their products for sale. See State v. Morgan, 98 N. C. 641, 3 S. E. 927; State v. O'Connell, 26 Ind. 267; State v. Sprague, 149 Mo. 409, 50 S. W. 901. More...
  • SHOPA
    In old records, a shop. Cowell.
  • SHORE
    Land on the margin of the sea, or a lake or river. In common parlance, the word "shore" is" understood to mean the line that separates the tide-water from the land about it, wherever that line may be, and in whatever stage of the tide. The word "shore," in its More...
  • SHORT CAUSE
    A cause which is not likely to occupy a great portion of the time of the court, and which may be entered on the list of "short causes," upon the applicar tion of one of the parties, and will then be heard more speedily than it would be in its More...
  • SHORT ENTRY
    A custom of bankers of entering on the customer's pass-book the amount of notes deposited for collection, in such a manner that the amount is not carried to the latter's general balance until the notes are paid. See Giles v. Perkins, 9 East 12; Blaine v. Bourne, 11 R. I. More...
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