Legal Term Dictionary

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  • REEVE
    In old English law. A ministerial officer of justice. His duties seem to have combined many of those now confided to the sheriff or constable and to the justice of the peace. He was also called, in Saxon, "fferefa."-Land reeve. See. LAND.
  • REFALO
    A word composed of the three initial syllables "re." "a." "Ia," for "re-oordari facias loquelam" (q. v.) 2 Sell. Pr. 160.
  • REFARE
    To bereave, take away, rob. Cowell.
  • REFECTION
    In the civil law. Reparation ; re-establishment of a building. Dig. 19, 1, 6M.
  • REFER
    1. When a case or action involves matters of account or other Intricate details which require minute examination, and for that reason are not fit to be brought before a Jury, it ia usual to refer the whole case, or some part of it, to the decision of an auditor More...
  • REFEREE
    In practice. A person to whom a cause pending in a court is referred by the court, to take testimony, hear the parties, and report thereon to the court See REFER. And see In re Hathaway, 71 N. Y. 243; Betts v. Letcher, 1 S. D. 182, 46 N. W. More...
  • REFERENCE
    In contraots. An agreement to submit to arbitration; tbe act of parties In submitting their controversy to chosen referees or arbitrators. In practice. The act of sending a cause pending in court to a referee for his examination and decision. See REFER. In commercial law. The act of sending or More...
  • REFERENDARIUS
    An offcer by whom the order of causes was laid before the Roman emperor, the desires of petitioners made known, and answers returned to them. Vicat, Voc Jur.; Calvin.
  • REFERENDARY
    In Saxon law. A master of requests; an officer to whom petitions to the king were referred. Spelman.
  • REFERENDO SINGULA SINGULIS
    Lat Referring individual or separate words to separate subjects; making a distributive reference of words in an instrument; a rule of construction.
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