Legal Term Dictionary

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  • COUSTOUMIER
    (Otherwise spelled "Coustumier" or "Coutumier") In old French law. A collection of customs, unwritten laws, and forms of procedure. Two such volumes are of especial importance in juridical history, viz., the Grand Cousiumicr de Xormandie, and the Coutumier de France or Grand Coutumier.
  • COUTHUTLAUGH
    A person who willingly and knowingly received an outlaw, and cherished or concealed him; for which offense he underwent the same punishment as the outlaw himself. Bract. 128b; Spelman.
  • COUVERTURE
    in French law, is the deposit ("margin ') made by the client in the hands of the broker, either of a sum of money or of securities, in order to guaranty the broker for the payment of the securities •which he purchases for the client. Arg. Fr. Merc. Law, 555.
  • COVENABLE
    A French word signifying convenient or suitable; as covenably endowed. It is anciently written "convenable/' Termes de la Ley.
  • COVENANT
    In practice. The name of a common-law form of action ex contractu, which lies for the recovery of damages for breach of a covenant, or contract under seal. Stickney v. Stickney, 21 N. H. ^68. In the law of contracts. An agreement, convention, or promise of two or more parties, More...
  • COVENANTEE
    The party to whom a covenant is made. Shep. Touch. 160.
  • COVENANTOR
    The party who makes a covenant. Shep. Touch. 160.
  • COVENANTS PERFORMED
    In Pennsylvania practice. This is the name of a plea to the action of covenant whereby the defendant, upon informal notice to the plaintiff, may give anything in evidence which he might have pleaded. With the addition of tbe words "absque hoc" it amounts to a denial of the allegations More...
  • COVENT
    A contraction, in the old books, of the word "convent."
  • COVENTRY ACT
    The name given to the statute 22 & 23 Car. II. c. 1, which provided for the punishment of assaults with; Intent to maim or disfigure a person. It was so named from Its being occasioned by an assault on Sir John Coventry In the street. 4 Bl. Comm. 207; More...
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