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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  • RELIGIOUS
    When religious books, or reading are spoken of, those which tend to promote the religion taught by the Christian dispensation must be considered as referred to, unless the meaning is so limited by associated words or circumstances as to show that the speaker or writer had reference to some other More...
  • RELINQUISHMENT
    In practice. A forsaking, abandoning, renouncing, or giving over a right.
  • RELIQUA
    The remaiuder or debt which a person finds himself debtor in upon the balancing or liquidation of an account. Hence ^reliquary, the debtor of a reliqua; as also a person who only pays piece-meal. Enc. Lond.
  • RELIQUES
    Remains; such as the bones, etc., of saints, preserved with great veneration as sacred memorials. They have been forbidden to be used or brought into England. St 3 Jac. I. c. 26.
  • RELOCATIO
    Lat In the civil law. A renewal of a lease on its determination. It may be either express or tacit; the latter is when the tenant holds over with the knowledge and without objection of the landlord. Mackeld. Rom. Law, f 412.
  • RELOCATION
    In Scotch law. A reletting or renewal of a lease; a tacit relocation Is permitting a tenant to hold over without any new agreement. In mining law. A new or fresh location of an abandoned or forfeited mining claim by a stranger, or by the original locator when he wishes More...
  • REMAINDER
    The remnant of an estate in land, depending upon a particular prior estate created at the same time and by the same instrument and limited to arise Immediately on the determination of that estate, and not in abridgment of it 4 Kent, Comm. 197. An estate limited to take effect More...
  • REMAINDER-MAN
    One who is entitled to the remainder of the estate after a particular estate carved out of it has expired.
  • REMAND
    To remand a prisoner, after a preliminary or partial hearing before a court or magistrate, is to send him back to custody, to be kept until the hearing is resumed or the trial comes on. To remand a case, brought into an appellate court or removed from one court into More...
  • REMANENT PRO DEFECTU EMPTORUM
    In practice. The return made by the sheriff to a writ of execution when he has not been able to sell the property seized, .that the same remains unsold for want of buyers.
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