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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  • RECONDUCTION
    In the civil law. A renewing of a former lease; relocation. Dig. 19, 2, 13, 11; Code Nap. arts. 1737-1740.
  • RECONSTRUCTION
    The name commonly given to the process of reorganising, by acts of congress and executive action, the governments of the states which had passed ordinances of secession, and of re-establishing their constitutional relations to the national government, restoring their representation in congress, and effecting the necessary changes in their internal More...
  • RECONTINUANCE
    seems to be used to signify that a person has recovered an incorporeal hereditament of which he had been wrongfully deprived. Thus, "A. Is disseised of a mannor, whereunto an advowson is appendant, an estranger [i. e., neither A. nor the disseisor] usurpes to the advowson; If the disseisee [A.] More...
  • RECONVENIRE
    Lat In the canon and dvil law. To make a cross-demand upon the actor, or plaintiff. 4 Reeve, Eng. Law, 14, and note, (r.)
  • RECONVENTION
    In the civil law. An action by a defendant against a plaintiff In a former action; a cross-bill or litigation. The term is used in practice in the states of Louisiana and Texas, derived from the re-conventio of the civil law. Reconvention ia not identical with set-off, but more extensive.. More...
  • RECONVERSION
    That imaginary process by which a prior constructive conversion is annulled, and the converted property restored in contemplation of law to its original state.
  • RECONVEYANCE
    takes place where a mortgage debt is paid off, and the mortgaged property is conveyed again to the mortgagor or his representatives free from the mortgage debt Sweet
  • RECOPILACION DE INDIAS
    A collection of Spanish colonial law, promulgated A. D. 1680. See Schm. Civil Law, Introd. 94.
  • RECORD
    v. To register or enroll; to write out on parchment or paper, or In a book, for the purpose of preservation and perpetual memorial; to transcribe a document, or enter the history of an act or series of acts, in an official volume, for the purpose of giving notice of More...
  • RECORD
    n. A written account of some act transaction, or instrument drawn up, under authority of law, by a proper officer, and designed to remain as a memorial or permanent evidence of the matters to which it relates. There are three kinds of records, viz.: (1) judicial, as an attainder; (2) More...
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