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.

Search
  • ISSUE
    n. The act of issuing, sending forth, emitting or promulgating; the giving a thing its first inception; as the issue of an order or a writ. In pleading. The disputed point or ques tlon to which the parties in an action have narrowed their several allegations, and upon which they More...
  • ISSUES
    In English law. The goods and profits of the lands of a defendant against whom a writ of distringas or distress infinite has been issued, taken by virtue of such writ, are called "issues." 3 Bl. Comm. 280; "1 Chit. Crim. Law, 351."
  • ITA EST
    Lat. So It is; so it stands. In modern civil law, this phrase Is a form of attestation added to exemplifications from a notary's register when the same are made by the successor in office of the notary who made the original entries.
  • ITA LEX SCRIPTA EST
    Lat. So the law is written. Dig. 40, 9, 12. The law must be obeyed notwithstanding the apparent rigor of its application. 3 Bl. Comm. 430. We must be content with tbe law as it stands, without inquiring into its reasons. 1 Bl. Comm. 32.
  • ITA QUOD
    Lat. In old practice. So that. Formal words in writs. Ita quod habeas corpus, so that you have the body. 2 Mod. 180." The name of the stipulation in a submission to arbitration which begins with the words "so as [ita quod] the award be made of and upon the More...
  • ITA TE DEUS ADJUVET
    Lat. So help yon God. The old form of administering an oath in England, generally in connection with other words, thus: Ita te Deus adjuvet, et sacrosancta Dei Bvangelia, So help yon God, and God's holy Evangelists. Ita te Deus adjuvet et omnes sancti, So help yon God and all More...
  • ITEM
    Also; likewise; agalri. This word was formerly used to mark the beginning of a new paragraph or division after the first, whence is derived the common application of it to denote a separate or distinct particular of an account or bill. See Horwitz v. Norris, 60 Pa. 282; Baldwin v. More...
  • ITER
    Lat. In tbe civil law. A way; a right of way belonging as a servitude to an estate in the country, (prcedium rusticum.) The right of way was of three kinds: (1) iter, a right to walk, or ride on horseback, or in a litter; (2) actus, a right to More...
  • ITERATIO
    Lat. Repetition. In the Roman law, a bonitary owner might liberate a slave, and the quiritary owner's repetition (iteratio) of the process effected a complete manumission. Brown.
  • ITINERA
    Eyres, or circuits. 1 Reeve, Eng. Law, 52.
Showing 7870 of 14636