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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  • CONVENTIO
    In canon law. The act of summoning or calling together the parties by summoning the defendant. La the civil law. A compact, agreement, or convention. An agreement between two or more persons respecting a legal relation between them. The term is one of very wide scope, and applies to all More...
  • CONVENTION
    In Roman law. An agreement between parties; a pact A convention was a mutual engagement between two persons, possessing all the subjective requisites of a contract, but which did not give rise to an action, nor receive the sanction of the law, as bearing an "obligation," until the objective requisite More...
  • CONVENTIONAL
    Depending on, or arising from, the mutual agreement of parties; as distinguished from legal, which means created by, or arising from, the act of the law. As to conventional "Estates," "Interest," "Mortgage," "Subrogation," and "Trustees," see those titles.
  • CONVENTIONE
    The name of a writ for the breach of any covenant in writing, whether real or personal. Reg. Orig. 115; Fitzh. Nat. Brev. 145.
  • CONVENTIONS
    This name is sometimes given to compacts or treaties with foreign countries as to the apprehension and extradition of fugitive offenders. See EXTRADITION.
  • CONVENTUAL CHURCH
    In ecclesiastical law. That which consists of regular clerks, professing some order or religion; or of dean and chapter; or other societies of spiritual men.
  • CONVENTUALS
    Religious men united in a convent or religious house. Cowell.
  • CONVENTUS
    Lat. A coming together; a convention or assembly. Conventus magna-turn vel procerum (the assembly of chief men or peers) was one of the names of the English parliament 1 BL Comm. 148. In the civil law. The term meant a gathering together of people; a crowd assembled for any purpose; More...
  • CONVERSANT
    One who is in the habit of being in a particular place is said to be conversant there. Barnes, 162. Acquainted; familiar.
  • CONVERSANTES
    In old English law. Conversant or dwelling; commorant.
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