Legal Term Dictionary

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  • ADEEM
    To take away, recall, or revoke. To satisfy a legacy by some gift or substituted disposition, made by the testator, in advance. Tolman v. Tolman, 85 Me. 317, 27 Atl. 184. See ADEMPTION.
  • ADELANTADO
    In Spanish law. A governor of a province; a president or president judge; a judge having jurisdiction over a kingdom, or over certain provinces only. So called from having authority over the judges of those places. Las Partldas, pt. 3, tit 4, 1. 1.
  • ADELING, OR ATHELING
    Noble; excellent. A title of honor among the Anglo-Saxons, properly belonging to the king's children. Spelman.
  • ADEMPTIO
    Lat. In the civil law. A revocation of a legacy; an ademption. Inst 2, 21, pr. Where it was expressly transferred from one person to another, it was called translatio. Id. 2, 21,1; Dig. 34, 4.
  • ADEMPTION
    The revocation, recalling, or cancellation of a legacy, according to the apparent intention of the testator, implied by the law from acts done by him in his life, though such acts do not amount to an express revocation of it. Kenaday v. Sinnott 179 U. S. 606, 21 Sup. Ct More...
  • ADEO
    Lat. So, as. Adeo plena et integre, as fully and entirely. 10 Coke, 65
  • ADEQUATE
    Sufficient; proportionate; equally efficient —Adequate care. Such care as a man of ordinary prudence would himself take under similar circumstances to avoid accident: care proportionate to the risk to be incurred. Wallace v. Wilmington & N. R. Co., 8 Houst (Del.) 529, 18 Atl. 818.—Adequate cause. In criminal law. Adequate More...
  • ADESSE
    In the civil law. To be present ; the opposite of abesse. Calvin
  • ADFERRUMINATIO
    In the civil law. The welding together of iron; a species of adfunctio, (q. v.) Called also ferruminatio. Mackeld. Rom. Law, § 276; Dig. 6, 1, 23, 5.
  • ADHERENCE
    In Scotch law. The name of a form of action by which the mutual obligation of marriage may be enforced by either party. Bell. It corresponds to the English action for the restitution of conjugal rights.
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