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.

Search
  • RENEWAL
    The act of renewing or reviving. The substitution of a new grant, engagement, or right, in place of one which has expired, of the same character and on the same terms and conditions as before; as, the renewal of a note, a lease, a patent. See Carter v. Brooklyn L. More...
  • RENOUNCE
    To reject; cast off; repudiate ; disclaim; forsake; abandon ; divest one's self of a right power, or privilege. Usually It implies an affirmative act of disclaimer or disavowal.
  • RENOUNCING PROBATE
    In English practice. Refusing to take upon one's self the office of executor or executrix. Refusing to take out probate under a will wherein one has been appointed executor or executrix. Holthonse.
  • RENOVARE
    Lat In old English law. To renew. Annuatim renovare, to renew annually. A phrase applied to profits which are taken and the product renewed again. Anib. 13L
  • RENT
    At common low. A certain profit issuing yearly out of lands and tenements corporeal; a species of incorporeal hereditament. 2 Bl. Comm. 41. A compensation or return yielded periodically, to a certain amount, out of the profits of some corporeal hereditaments, by the tenant thereof. 2 Steph. Comm. 23. A More...
  • RENTAGE
    Rent.
  • RENTAL
    (Said to be corrupted from "rent-roll.") In English law. A roll on which the rents of a manor are registered or set down, and by which the lord's bailiff collects the same. It contains the lands and tenements let to each tenant, the names of tbe tenants, and other particulars. More...
  • RENTE
    In French law. Rente ia the annual return which represents the revenue of a capital or of an immovable alienated. The constitution of rente. is a contract by which one of the parties lends to the other a capital which he agrees not to recall, in consideration of the borrower's More...
  • RENTS, ISSUES, AND PROFITS
    more commonly signify in the books a chattel real interest in land; a kind of estate growing out of the land, for life or years, producing an annual or other rent. Bruce v. Thompson, 26 Vt 746.
  • RENUNCIATION
    The act of giving up a right. See RENOUNCE.
Showing 11950 of 14636