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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  • PROVE
    To establish a fact or hypothesis as true by satisfactory and sufficient evidence. To present a claim or demand against a bankrupt or Insolvent estate, and establish by evidence or affidavit that the same Is cor-oreet and due, for the purpose of receiving a dividend on it. Tibbetts v. Trafton, More...
  • PROVER
    In old English law. A person who, on being indicted of treason or fel ony, and arraigned for the same, confessed the fact before plea pleaded, and appealed or accused others, his accomplices, in the same crime, in order to obtain his pardon. 4 Bl. Comm. 329, 330.
  • PROVIDED
    The word used In introducing a proviso (which see.) Ordinarily it slg nifies or expresses a condition; but this is not iuvariable, for, according to the context, it may import a covenant, or a limitation or qualification, or a restraint, modification, or exception to something which precedes. See Stanley v. More...
  • PROVINCE
    Sometimes this signifies the district into which a country has been divld ed; as, the province of Canterbury, in England ; the province of Languedoc, in France. Sometimes it means a dependency or colony, as, the province of New Brunswick. It is sometimes used figuratively to signify power or authority; More...
  • PROVINCIAL CONSTITUTIONS
    The decrees of provincial synods held under divers archbishops of Canterbury from Stephen Langton, in the reign of Henry III., to Henry Chichele, in the reign of Henry V., and adopted also by the province of York in the reign of Henry VI. Wharton.
  • PROVINCIAL COURTS
    In English law. The several arch-episcopal courts in the two ecclesiastical provinces of England.
  • PROVINCIALE
    A work on ecclesiastical law, by William Lyndwode, official principal to Archbishop Chichele in the reign of Edward IV. 4 Reeve, Eng. Law, c. 25, p. 117.
  • PROVINCIALIS
    Lat. In the civil law. One who has his domicile in a province. Dig. 50, 16, 190.
  • PROVING OF THE TENOR
    In Scotch practice. An action for proving the tenor of a lost deed. Bell.
  • PROVISION
    In commercial law. Funds remitted by the drawer of a bill of exchange to the drawee in order to meet the bill, or property remaining in the drawee's hands or due from him to the drawer, and appropriated to that purpose. In ecclesiastie&l law. A provision was a nomination by More...
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