Legal Term Dictionary

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  • WEIGHAGE
    In English law. A duty or toll paid for weighing merchandise. It is called "tronage" for weighing wool at the king's beam, or "pesage" for weighing other avoirdupois goods. 2 Chit. Com. Law, 16.
  • WEIGHT
    A measure of heaviness or ponderosity; and in a metaphorical sense in-fluence, effectiveness, or power to influence judgment or conduct—Gross Weight. The whole weight of goods and merchandise, including the dust and dross, and also the chest or bag, etc., upon which tare and tret are allowed.—Weights of annceL See More...
  • WEIR
    A fence or an inclosure pf twigs, set in a stream to catch fish. Pub. St. Mass. p. 1297; Treat v. Chipman, 35 Me. 38.
  • WELL
    adj. In marine insurance, A term used as.descriptive of the safety and soundness of a vessel, in a warranty of her condition at a particular time and place; as,"warranted well" In the old reports. Good, sufficient, unobjectionable in law; the opposite of "ill."
  • WELL
    n. A well, as the term is used in a conveyance, is an artificial excavation and erection in and upon land, which necessarily, from its nature and the mode of its use, in-cludes and comprehends the substantial occu-pation and beneficial enjoyment of the whole premises on which it is situated. More...
  • WELL KNOWING
    A phrase used in pleading as the technical expression in laying a scienter, (q. v.)
  • WELSH MORTGAGE
    See MORTGAGE.
  • WEND
    In old records. A large extent of ground, comprising several juga; a peram-bulation; a circuit. Spelman; Cowell.
  • WERA, OR WERE
    The estimation or price of a man, especially of one slain. In the criminal law of the Anglo-Saxons, every man's life had its value, called a "were," or "capitis esttmetio."
  • WEREGELT THEF
    Sax. In old English law. A robber who might be ransomed ' Fleta, lib. 1, c. 47, § 13.
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