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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  • TIGHT
    As colloquially applied to a note, bond, mortgage, lease, etc, this term signifles that the clauses providing the creditor's remedy in case of default (as, by foreclosure, execution, distress, etc.) are summary and stringent
  • TIGNI IMMITTENDI
    Lat In the civil law. The name of a servitude which is the right of inserting a beam or timber from the wall of one house into that of a neighboring house, in order that it may rest on the latter, and that the wall of the latter may bear More...
  • TIGNUM
    Lat A civil-law term for building material; timber.
  • TIHLER
    In old Saxon law. An accusation.
  • TILLAGE
    A place tilled or cultivated; land under cultivation, as opposed to lands lying fallow or in pasture.
  • TIMBER
    Wood felled for building or other such like use. In a legal sense it generally means (in England) oak, ash, and elm, but in some parts of England, and generally in America, it is used in a wider sense, which is recognized by the law. The term "timber," as used More...
  • TIMBERLODE
    A service by which tenants were bound to carry timber felled from the woods to the lord's house. Cowell
  • TIME
    The measure of duration. The word is expressive both of a precise point or terminus and of an interval between two points. In pleading. A point in or space of duration at or during which some fact is alleged to have been committed. --Cooling time. See that title.-Reasonable time. Such More...
  • TIMOCRACY
    An aristocracy of property; government by men of property who are possessed of a certain income. Timores vanI sunt sestimandi qui non cadnnt in constantem virnm. 7 Coke, 17. Fears which do not assail a resolute man are to be accounted vain.
  • TINBOUNDING
    is a custom regulating the manner in which tin is obtained from waste-land, or land which has formerly been waste-land, within certain districts in Cornwall and Devon. The custom is described In the leading case on the subject as follows: "Any person may enter on the waste-land of another, and More...
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