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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  • WARNISTURA
    In old records. Garniture; furniture; provision. Cowell.
  • WARNOTH
    In old English law. An ancient custom, whereby, if any tenant hold-ng of the Castle of Dover failed in paying his rent at the day, he should forfeit double, and, for the second failure, treble, eta Cowell.
  • WARP
    A rope attached to some fixed point, used for moving a ship. Pub. St Mass. 1882, p. 1297.
  • WARRANDICE
    In Scotch law. Warranty; a clause in a charter or deed by which the grantor obliges himself that tbe right conveyed shall be effectual to the receiver. Ersk. Prin. 2, 3,11. A clause where¬by the grantor of a charter obliges himself to warrant or make good the thing granted to More...
  • WARRANT
    v. In conveyancing. To assure the title to property sold, by an ex-press covenant to that effect in the deed of conveyance. To stipulate by an express cove-nant that the title of a grantee shall be good, and his possession undisturbed. In contracts. To engage or promise that a certain More...
  • WARRANT
    n. 1. A writ or precept from a competent authority in pursuance of law, directing the doing of an act, and ad¬dressed to an officer or person competent to do the act, and affording him protection from damage, if he does it. People v. Wood, 71 N. Y. 376. 2.Particularly, More...
  • WARRANTEE
    A person to whom a warranty is made.
  • WARRANTIA CHARTAE
    In old practice. Warranty of charter. A writ which lay for one who, being enfeoffed of lands or tenements, with a clause of warranty, was afterwards impleaded in an assize or other action in which he could not vouch to warranty. In such case, it might be brought against the More...
  • WARRANTIA CUSTODIES
    An Old English writ which lay for him who was challenged to be a ward to another, In re¬spect to land said to be holden by knight-service; which land, when it was bought by the ancestors of the ward, was warranted free from such thraldom. The writ lay against the More...
  • WARRANTIA DIEI
    A writ which lay for a man who, having had a day assigned him personally to appear in court in any action in which he was sued, was in the mean time, by commandment, employed in the king's service, so that he could not come at the day assigned. It More...
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