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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  • MORSELLUM, OR MORSELLUS, TERRAE
    In old English law. A small parcel or bit of land.
  • MORT CIVILE
    In French law. Civil death, as upon conviction for felony. It was nominally abolished by a law of the 31st of May, 1854, but something very similar to it in effect at least still remains. Thus, the property of the condemned, possessed by him at the date of his conviction, More...
  • MORT D'ANCESTOR
    An ancient and now almost obsolete remedy in the English law. An assize of mort aVancestor was a writ which lay for a person whose ancestor died seised of lands in fee-simple, and after his death a stranger abated; and this writ directed the sheriff to summon a Jury or More...
  • MORTALITY
    This word, in its ordinary sense, never means violent death, but death arising from natural causes. Lawrence v. Aberdein, 5 Barn. & Aid. 110.
  • MORTGAGE
    An estate created by a conveyance absolute in its form, but intended to secure the performance of some act, such as the payment of money, and the like, by the grantor or some other person, and to become void if the act is performed agreeably to the terms prescribed at More...
  • MORTGAGEE
    He that takes or receives a mortgage. -Mortgagee in possession. A mortgagee of real property who is in possession of it with the agreement or assent of the mortgagor, express or implied, and in recognition of his mortgage and because of it, and under such circumstances as to make the More...
  • MORTGAGOR
    He that gives a mortgage,
  • MORTH
    Sax. Murder, answering ex* actly to the French "assassinat" or "mucrtre de guet-apens"
  • MORTHLAGA
    A murderer. CowelL
  • MORTHLAGE
    Murder. Cowell.
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