Legal Term Dictionary

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  • SACCABOR
    In old Egnllsh law. The person from whom a thing had been stolen, and by whom the thief was freshly pursued. Bract, fol. 154b. See SACABURTH.
  • SACCULARII
    Lat In Roman law. Cutpurses. 4 Steph. Comm. 125.
  • SACUS
    L. Lat In old English law. A sack. A quantity of wool weighing thirty or twenty-eight stone. Fleta, L 2, c. 79, f 10.
  • SACCUS CUM BROCHIA
    L. Lat In old English law. A service or tenure of finding a sack and a broach (pitcher) to tbe sovereign for the use of the army. Bract L 2, c 16.
  • SACQUIER
    In maritime law. The name of an ancient officer, whose business was to load and unload vessels laden with salt, corn, or fish, to prevent the ship's crew defrauding the merchant by false tale, or cheating him of his merchandise otherwise. Laws Oleron, art 11; 1 Pet Adm. Append. 25
  • SACRA
    Lat In Roman law. The right to participate in the sacred rites of the city. Butl. Hor. Jur. 27.
  • SACRAMENTALES
    L. Lat In feudal law. Compurgators; persons who came to purge a defendant by their oath that they believed him innocent
  • SACRAMENT ACTIO
    Lat. In the older practice of the Roman law, this was one of the forms of legis actio, consisting in the deposit of a stake or juridical wager. See SACRAMENTUM.
  • SACRAMENTUM
    Lat. In Roman law. An oath, as being a very sacred thing; more particularly, the oath taken by soldiers to be true to their general and their country Ainsw. Lex. In one of the formal methods of beginning an action at law (legis actiones) known to the early Roman jurisprudence, More...
  • SACRILEGE
    In English criminal law. Larceny from a church. 4 Steph. Comm. 164. The crime of breaking a church or chapel, and stealing therein. 1 Russ. Crimes, 84a. In old English law. The desecration of anything considered holy; the alienation to lay-men or to profane or common purposes of what was More...
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