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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  • TEMPLARS
    A religious order of knighthood, Instituted about the year 1119, and so called because the members dwelt in a part of the temple of Jerusalem, and not far from the sepulcher of our Lord. They entertained Christian strangers and pilgrims charitably, and their profession was at first to defend travelers More...
  • TEMPLE
    Two English inns of court thus called because anciently the dwelling place of the Knights Templar. On the suppression of the order, they were purchased by some professors of the common law, and converted into hospitia or inns of court They are called the "Inner" and "Middle Temple," in relation More...
  • TEMPORAL LORDS
    The peers of England; the bishops are not in strictness held to be peers, but merely lords of parliament 2 Steph. Comm. 830, 845.
  • TEMPORALIS
    Lat. In the civil law. Temporary; limited to a certain time, -Temporalis aetio. An action which could only be brought within a certain period--Temporalis exceptio. A temporary exception which barred an action for a time only.
  • TEMPORALITIES
    In English law. The lay fees of bishops, with which their churches are endowed or permitted to be endowed by the liberality of the sovereign, and in virtue of which they become barons and lords of parliament. Spelman. In a wider sense, the money revenues of a church, derived from More...
  • TEMPORALITY
    The laity; secular people.
  • TEMPORARY
    That which is to last for a limited time only, as distinguished from that which is perpetual, or indefinite, in its duration. Thus, temporary alimony is granted for the support of the wife pending the action for divorce. Dayton v. Drake, 64 Iowa, 714, 21 N. W. 158. A temporary More...
  • TEMPORE
    Lat. In the time of. Thus, the volume called "Cases tempore Holt" is a collection of cases adjudged in the king's bench during the time, of Lord Holt. Wall. Rep. 398.
  • TEMPORIS EXCEPTIO
    Lat In the civil law. A plea of time; a plea of lapse of time, in bar of an action. Corresponding to the plea of prescription, or the statute of limitations, in our law. See Mackeld Rom. TAW, I 213.
  • TEMPTUS
    Lat. In the civil and old English law. Time In general. A time limited; a season; e. p., tempus pessonis, mast time in the forest. -Tempns continuum. In the civil law. A continuous or absolute period of time. A term which begins to run from a certain event, even though More...
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