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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  • EXPURGATION
    The act of purging or cleansing, as where a book is published without its obscene passages.
  • EXPURGATOR
    One who corrects by expurging.
  • EXQUAESTOR
    In Roman law. One who had filled the office of quaestor. A title given to Tribonian. Inst procem. s 3. Used only in the ablative case, (exquaestore.)
  • EXROGARE
    (From ex, from, and rogare, to pass a law.) In Roman law. To take something from an old law by a new law. Tayl Civil Law, 155.
  • EXTEND
    To expand, enlarge, prolong, widen, carry out further than the original limit; as, to extend the time for filing an answer, to extend a lease, term of office, charter, railroad track, etc. Flagler v. Hearst 62 App. Div. 18. 70 N. Y. Supp. 956; Gouldlng v. Hammond, 54 Fed. 642. More...
  • EXTENDI FACIAS
    Lat. You cause to be extended. In English practice. The name of a writ of execution, (derived from its two emphatic words;) more commonly called an "extent." 2 Tidd, Pr. 1043; 4 Steph, Comm. 43.
  • EXTENSION
    In mercantile law. An allowance of additional time for the payment of debts. An agreement between a debtor and his creditors, by which they allow him further time for the payment of his liabilities. In patent law. An extension of the life of a patent for an additional period of More...
  • EXTENSORES
    In old English law. Extenders or appraisers. The name of certain officers appointed to appraise and divide or apportion lands. It was their duty to make a survey, schedule, or inventory of the lands, to lay them out under certain heads, and then to ascertain the value of each, as More...
  • EXTENT
    In English practice. A writ of execution issuing from the exchequer upon a debt due the crown, or upon a debt due a private person, if upon recognizance or statute merchant or staple, by which the sheriff is directed to appraise the debtor's lands, and, instead of selling them, to More...
  • EXTENTA MANERII
    (The extent or survey of a manor.) The title of a statute passed 4 Edw. I. St. 1; being a sort of direction for making a survey or terrier of a manor, and all its appendages. 2 Reeve, Eng. Law, 140.
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