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
  • RIGHT OF ENTRY
    A right of entry is the right of taking or resuming possession of land by entering on it in a peaceable manner.
  • RIGHT OF HABITATION
    In Louisiana. The right to occupy another man's house as a dwelling, without paying rent or other compensation.
  • RIGHT OF POSSESSION
    The right to possession which may reside in one man, while another has the actual possession, being the right to enter and turn out such actual occupant; e. g., the right of a disseisee. An apparent right of possession Is one which may be defeated by a better; an actual More...
  • RIGHT OF PROPERTY
    The mere right of property in land; the abstract right which remains to the owner after he has lost the right of possession, and to recover which the writ of right was given. United with possession, and the right of possession, this right constitutes a complete title to lands, tenements, More...
  • RIGHT OF REDEMPTION
    The right to disincumber property or to free it from a claim or lien; specifically, the right (granted by statute only) to free property from the incumbrance of a foreclosure or other judicial sale, or to recover the title passing thereby, by paying what is due, with interest, costs, etc. More...
  • RIGHT OF RELIEF
    In Scotch law. The right of a cautioner (surety) to demand reimbursement from the principal debtor when he has been compelled to pay the debt 1 Bell, Comm. 847.
  • RIGHT OF REPRESENTATION AND PERFORMANCE
    By the acts 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 15, and 5 & 6 Vict c. 45, the author of a play, opera, or mtfsical composition, or his assignee, has the sole right of representing or causing it to*be represented in public at any place in the British dominions during More...
  • RIGHT OF SEARCH
    In international law. The right of one vessel, on the high seos, to stop a vessel of another nationality and examine her papers and (in some cases) her cargo. Thus, in time of war, a vessel of either belligerent has the right to search a neutral ship, encountered at sea, More...
  • RIGHT OF WAY
    The right of passage or of way is a servitude Imposed by law or by convention, and by virtue of which one has a right to pass on foot, or horseback, or In a vehicle, to drive beasts of burden or carts, through the estate of another. When this servitude More...
  • RIGHT PATENT
    An obsolete writ, which was brought for lands and tenements, and not for an advowson, or common, and lay only fQr an estate in fee-simple, and not for him who had a lesser estate; as tenant in tall, tenant in frank marriage, or tenant for life. Fitzh. Nat Brev. 1.
Showing 12195 of 14636