Legal Term Dictionary

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  • PROTECTIONIBUS DE
    The English statute 33 Edw. I. St 1, allowing a challenge to be entered against a protection, etc.
  • PROTECTIVE TARIFF
    A law imposing duties on imports, with the purpose and the effect of discouraging the use of products of foreign origin, and consequently of stimulating the home production of the same or equivalent articles. R. E. Thompson, in Enc. Brit.
  • PROTECTOR OF SETTLEMENT
    In English law. By the statute 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 74, | 32, power is given to any settlor to appoint any person or persons, not exceeding three, the "protector of the settlement."* The object of such api>ointment is to prevent the tenant in tail from barring any More...
  • PROTECTORATE
    (1) The period during which Oliver Cromwell ruled in England. (2) Also the office of protector. (3) The relation of the English sovereign, till the year 1864, to the Ionian Islands. Wharton.
  • PROTEST
    1, A formal declaration made by a person interested or concerned in some act about to be done, or already performed, and in relation thereto, whereby he expresses his dissent or disapproval, or affirms the act to be done against his will or convictions, the object being generally to save More...
  • PROTESTANDO
    L. Lat Protesting. The emphatic word formerly used in pleading by way of protestation. 3 Bl. Comm. 311. See PROTESTATION.
  • PROTESTANTS
    Those who adhered to the doctrine of Luther; so called because, in 1529, they protested against a decree of the emperor Charles V. and of the diet of Spires, and declared that they appealed to a general council. The name is now applied indiscriminately to all the sects, of whatever More...
  • PROTESTATION
    In pleading. The indirect affirmation or denial of the truth of some matter which cannot with propriety of safety be positively affirmed, denied, or entirely passed over. See 3 Bl. Comm. 311. The exclusion of a conclusion. Co. Litt 124. In practice. An asseveration made by taking God to witness. More...
  • PROTHONOTARY
    The title given to an officer who officiates as principal clerk of some courts. Vin. Abr. See Trebilcox v. McAlptne, 46 Hun (N. Y.) 469; Whitney v. Hopkins, 135 Pa. 246, 19 AtL 1075.
  • PROTOCOL
    The first draft or rough minutes of an instrument or transaction; the original copy of a dispatch, treaty, or other documeut Brande. A document serving as the preliminary to, or opening of, any diplomatic transaction. In old Scotch practice. A book, marked by the clerk-register, and delivered to a notary More...
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