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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  • SOLEMNES LEGUM FORMUAE
    Lat In the cvil law. Solemn forms of laws; forms of forensic proceedings and of trans* acting legal acts. One of the sources of the unwritten law of Rome. Butl. Hor. Jur. 47.
  • SOLEMNITAS ATTACHIAMENTORUM
    In old English practice. Solemnity or formality of attachments. The Issuing of attachments in a certain formal and regular order. Bract fols. 439, 440; 1 Reeve, Eng. Law, 480. Solemnitates juris snnt observanda*. The solemnities of law are to be observed. Jenk. Cent 13.
  • SOLEMNITY
    A rite or ceremony; the formality established by law to render a contract, agreement or other act valid.
  • SOLEMNIZE
    To solemnize, spoken of a marriage, means no more than to enter into a marriage contract with due publication, before third persons, for the purpose of giving it notoriety and certainty; which may be before any persons, relatives, friends, or strangers, competent to testify to the facts. See Dyer v. More...
  • SOLICITATION
    Asking; enticing; urgent request Thus "solicitation of chastity" is the asking or urging a woman to surrender her chastity. The word is also used in such phrases as "solicitation to larceny," to bribery, etc.
  • SOLIDARY
    A term of civil-law origin, signifying that the right or interest spoken of is Joint or common. A "solidary obliga* tlon" corresponds to a "Joint and several" obligation in the common law; that is, one fpr which several debtors are bound in such wise that each is liable for the More...
  • SOLIDUM
    Lat. In the civil law. A whole; an entire or undivided thing.
  • SOLIDUS LEGALIS
    A coin equal to 13s. 4d. of the present standard. 4 Steph. Comm. 119rt. Originally the "solldus" was a gold coin of the Byzantine Empire, but in medieval times the term was applied to several varieties of coins, or as descriptive of a money of account apd is supposed to More...
  • SOLINUM
    In old English law. Two plow-lands, and somewhat less than a half. Co. Litt. 5a. Solo codit quod solo inaodifioatur. That which is built upon the soil belongs to the soil. The proprietor of the soil becomes also proprietor of the building erected upon it Mackeld. Rom. Law, ? 275. More...
  • SOLICITOR
    In English law. A legal practitioner in the court of chancery. The words "solicitor" and "attorney" are commonly used indiscriminately, although they are not precisely the same, an attorney being a practitioner in the courts of common law, a solicitor a practitioner in the courts of eq- ulty. Most attorneys More...
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