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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  • LAPIDATION
    The act of stoning a person to death.
  • LAPIDICINA
    Lat In the civil law. A stone-quarry.' Dig. 7, 1, 9, 2.
  • LAPILLI
    Lat In the civil law. Precious stones. Dig. 34, 2,19,17. Distinguished from "gems," (gemma!.) Id.
  • LAPIS MARMORIUS
    A marble stone about twelve feet longj and three feet broad, placed at the upper end of Westminster Hall, where was likewise a marble chair erected on the middle thereof, in which the English sovereigns anciently sat at their coronation dinner, and at other times the lord chancellor. Wharton.
  • LAPSE
    v. To glide; to pass slowly, silently, .or by degrees. To slip; to deviate from the proper path. Webster. To fail or fall. -Lapse patent. A patent for land issued ia substitution for an earlier patent to the same land, which was issued to another party, but has lapsed in More...
  • LAPSE
    n. In ecclesiastical law. The transfer, by forfeiture, of a right to present or collate to a vacant benefice from a person Vested, with such right to another, in consequence of some act of negligence by the former. Ayl. Par. 331. In the law of wills. The failure of a More...
  • LARCENOUS
    Having the character of larceny; as a "larcenous taking." Contemplating or intending larceny; as a "larcenous purpose" -Larcenous intent. A larcenous intent exists where a man knowingly takes and carries away the goods of another without any claim or pretense of right, with intent wholly to deprive the owner of More...
  • LARCENY
    In criminal law. The wrongful and fraudulent taking and carrying away by one person of the mere personal goods of another from any place, with a felonious Intent to convert them to his (the taker's) use, and make them his property, without the consent of the owner. State v. South, More...
  • LARDARIUS REGIS
    The king's lard-erer, or clerk of the kitchen. Cowell.
  • LARDING MONEY
    In the manor of Bradford, in Wilts, the tenants pay to their lord a small yearly rent by this name, which Is said to be for liberty to feed their hogs with the masts of the lord's wood, the fat of a hog being called "lard;" or it may be More...
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