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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  • RUBRIC
    Directions printed in books of law and in prayer-books, so termed because they were originally distinguished by red lnk. -Rubric of a statute. Its title, which was anciently printed in red letters. It serves to show the object of the legislature, and thence affords the means of Interpreting the body More...
  • RUDENESS
    Roughness; incivility, violence Touching another with rudeness may constitute a battery.
  • RUINA
    Lat In the civil law. Ruin, the falling of a house. Dig. 47, 9.
  • RULE
    v. This verb has two significations: (1) to command or require by a rule of court; as, to rule the sheriff to return the writ, to rule the defendant to plead. (2) To settle or decide a point of law arising npon a trial at nisi prius; and, when it More...
  • RULE
    n. 1. An established standard, guide, or regulation; a principle or regulation set up by authority, prescribing or directing action or forbearance; as, the rules of a legislative body, of a company, court, public office, of the law, of ethics. 2. A regulation made by a court of Justice or More...
  • RULES
    In American practice. This term Is sometimes used, by metonymy, to denote a time or season in the judicial year when motions may be made and rules taken, as special terms or argument-days, or even the vacations, as distinguished from the regular terms of the courts for the trial of More...
  • RULES OF A PRISON
    Certain limits without the walls, within which all prisoners in custody in civil actions were allowed to live, upon giving sufficient security to the marshal not to escape. -Rules of tbe king's bench prison. In English practice. Certain limits beyond the walls of the prison, within which all prisoners in More...
  • RUMOR
    Flying or popular report; a current story passing from one person to another without any known authority for the truth of it Webster. It is not generally admissible in evidence. State v. Culler, 82 Mo. 626; Smith v. Moore, 74 Vt 81, 52 Atl. 320.
  • RUN
    v. To have currency or legal validity in a prescribed territory; as, the writ ran throughout the county. To have applicability or legal effect during a prescribed period of time; as, the statute of limitations has run against the claim. To follow or accompany; to be attached to another thing More...
  • RUN
    n. In American law. A watercourse of small size. Webb v. Bedford,'2 Bibb. (Ky.) 354.
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