PERPETUITY Perpetuate testimony. ' If pending. 1 Such bills are indispensable may be PERQUISITE. See Emolument. PERSON. Persons in law are either nat- a witness to a disputed fact is old and infirm, or going abroad, it is not unusual to file a bill to " perpetuate " his testimony, although no suit be it PERSON 7T0 in securing justice, as impossible for a party to bring Us rights presently to a judicial decision; and unless, in the meantime, he may perpetuate his proofs, the rights may be lost without default in him. The law adopted similar means of preserving testimony. Bills to take testimony de bene esse arise when themselves ural or PERPETUITY. Of the sovereign! 1. absolute immortality in his political capacity. The settlemeht of an interest in property, which will go in the succession prescribed, without any power of alienation.^ 3. A grant of property wherein the vesting of an interest is unlawfully postponed.* So called, not because the grant, as written, would actually make the estate perpetual, but because it transgresses the limits which the law has set in restraint of grants that tend to a perpetual suspense of the title, or of its vesting, or, as it Is sometimes expressed, with less accuracy, to a perpetual prevention of alienation,^ A limitation which renders it inalienable beyond the period allowed by law,8 a life or lives in being and twenty- — one years more, with a fraction of a year added for the term of gestation, in cases of posthumous birth. All that is required is that the estate shall vest within the prescribed period. The right Of possession may be postponed longer.' by the law. They make com- Perpetuities are abhorred estates incapable of answering the ends of social merce, and providing for the sudden contingencies of private life, for which property was at first established.^ Com. 2; 450. 1 3 Bl. 2 Story, Eq. §§ 1505-13; Hall v. Stout, 4 Del. Oh. 873 (1871); 3 Daniel, » 1 Bl. » 2 Bl. Com. Com. Oh. Pr. 955; 1 Pomeroy, Eq. §§ 83, 810. tion. = In internal revenue laws, includes a partnership, company, or coiporation, as well as a natural person.* association, In the Revised Statutes, or any act or resolution of Congress passed subsequently to February 35, 1874, the word may extend and be applied to partnerships and corporations, unless the context limited sense A private V. J. shows that a more intended. = corporation is included within the prohi- one of the Fourteenth Amendment, that no State shall deny to any person the equal protection of the laws.* May include a State, or the United States.' Includes Indians, within habeas corpus ^ and intercourse acts.* In a statute, includes women, unless the context shows an intention to liihit it to men." In short, while " any person or persons " comprehends every human being, the terms will be limited to the class or classes in the mind of the legislature. While a natural person may do any act which he is not prohibited by law from doing, an artificial person can do none which the charter giving it existence does not expressly or by fair inference authorize." " Injuries to the person " import hm-t to the body, physical injuries; as, in a civil damage law.'" Offenses against the person are: homicide, mayhem, rape, robbery, buggery, battery, wounding, false imprisonment, kidnaping, abduction. ^^ The rights of persons are those which concern and are annexed to the persons of men; and they are either absolute or relative. See Right, 2. Bl. Com. 123, 467. 1 1 " United States " « R. S. § 5013. R. S. § 3140; 15 Op. Att.-Gen. 230. » R. S. § Saw. 1; 11 v. Fox, 94 U. Wheat. S. 331 (1876). 412; 12 Pet. Pembina Mining Co. v. 94 U. S. 321; 8 R. 404; 87 Ind. 696. 1.34; 239, 269, 274-75, 281, 283-92; 18 F. Pennsylvania, 125 U. S. 189 174. City of Philadelphia v. Girard's Heirs, 45 Pa. 26 (1868), Lowrie, C. J.; 10 id. 334; 88 td. 495. s «Ould Swayne, is bition of section " 249. legislation. ^ In the bankruptcy acts, person included a corpora- Mortmain. = — and powers from Trusts created for charitable or public pmT)oses are not subject to the rule.' See Accumulation; Charity, are and government corporations or bodies politic, i which derive their existence society clearly of property persons ; civil suits are actually pending." Ifattiral artificial. such as the God of nature formed us artificial persons, such as are created and devised by human laws for the purposes of Washington Hospital, See also Perin v. 95 U. S. 318 (1877), Carey, 24 How. 494 (1860) Saund. Uses, &c. 196; MoArthur v. Scott, 113 U. S. 38383 (1885), cases. Gray, J. ' Bruce v. Nickerson, 141 Mass. 403 (1886). « 3 Bl. Com. 174; Quid's Case, sapra; De Wolf v. Lawson, 61 Wis). 474 (1884); 76 Va. 147. « Jones V. Habersham, 107 U. S. 185 (1882); Detwiller V. Hartman, 87 N. J. E. 354 (1888). 'Alabama i6. 217; 9 St. 611 ; Certificates, 12 Kan. Op. Att.-Gen. 179 194; 33 Minn. 436; 8 N. J. E. 590; (1867); ^ Ohio 24 Tex. 61. United States v. Crook, 5 Dill. 458 (1879). • United States v. Shaw-mux, 2 Saw. 364 (1873). " Opinions of the Justices, 136 Mass. 680 (1883); 74 Ga, ' 795. ' Smith V. Alabama Life Ins. & Trust Co., 4 Ala. 568 (1843). " Calloway v. Laydon, 47 Iowa, 458 (1877). " 4 Bl. Com. 205-19. PERSONA 771 Person, fictitious. See Decoy; For- gery. Persons in public employment. Libel, 1; diction, 2; Name, Bail, 8; Body, 1; Citizen; ExIndividual; Inspection, 2; Juris- personal or a personal — action, asset, baggage, chattel, contract, covenant, credit, disability, knowledge, of action or a defense. estate, goods, injury, liability, liberty, note, perform- ance, property, representative, security, service, servitude, tax. Referring to some subjects — — as, an action, " personal property means simply movable, transitory: that which may follow the person of the owner asset, chattel, estate, lesser; — "per- contrasted with real, or that which concerns real estate. See those substantives. Personalty. Personal property, q. v. To assume the character of another without authority and do something Personate. to his or a third person's detriment. Known as "false personation," whicli meanor both at common law and, is a misde- generally, by for — a A Formal written application a superior for the exercise of his authority. to See Petitio. An application, in writing, to bring before a court a matter in regard to which judicial action is necessary, a suit being inappropriate from there being as yet no adversary party. 5 Under code practice, the first pleading filed by a plaintiff, wherein he states the facts of his case as they actually occurred.' " Petition " describes an application in writing, in contradistinction to a " motion," which may be viva voce.'' felony, punishable with penal servitude There may be a false personation of an ofScer for the purpose of maldng a pretended arrest, or collecting fines, taxes, or other alleged dues. Falsely personating any person under the provisions of the naturalization laws,' or any person holding a claim against the government, are criminal ofEenses.* See Chinese, p. 177, sec. 7; Pretense, False. A person. L. He who The person adversely presents a petition. interested is called the " re- spondent." any life.' PERSONA. the petty Petitio prineipii. begging of the question: assuming as conceded or settled the question at issue.^ Petitioner. is as, tition. In England, since 1874, to personate any person or his heir, executor, etc., with intent to claim succession family, opposed to gfrand and high: g. v.; petit or petty jury, larceny, treason, qq. v. See also PETTiFoaGEK. Petty-bag office. Proceedings to cancel letterspatent were in the " Petty Bag " office of the court of chancery, in which common-law proceedings were cai^ied on, and all were entitled "In the Petty Bag Office in Chancery." = See Hanapeb. PETITIO. L. Requesting, seeking: pe- statute.^ to property, or falsely- to claim relationship to little; PETITION. — Again, referring to some subjects as, an action, contract or covenant, defendant, inis ; Small, constable, or defendant. jury, privilege, security, service, tax is useful in proving a cause See Impertinence Eelevant. PETIT; PETTY.2 1. ; sonal " Relevant; materially Opposed, impertinent. Said of evidence which 2; Personal. Pertaining to the person belonging to an individual person; individual: by PERTENTENT. relevant. See also Arrest, demand, soever the influence is brought to bear, whether parents, uncles, or others.' See 5. pose; IpENTiTT, as, PETITION The use of petitions to induce the exercise of judi- power is manifold. By means of them proceedings are begun, expedited, and termicial discretion or nated in the settlement of decedents' and insolvents' estates; in the appointment, change, and discharge of guardians, committees, assignees, and other trustees, in the filing, auditing, and settling of their accounts; in the appointment of viewers under laws re- and lating to the opening of highways, the construction of bridges, canals, etc. In equity practice, they are generally ancillary to suits already begun. See Actio, Personalis; Delectus, Desceiptio, PerPersonam, Propria, etc.; Mobilia. There are also petitions for alimony and other al- sonse: In, PERSUADE. To See Influence. "inveigle, persuade, or entice" a child into in- voluntary servitude, necessarily implies assent yielded as the result of the persuading or enticing, by whom- J United States Blatchford, ^ ' v. Aucarola, 17 Blatch. 423, 430 (1880), J. " Petty " is the anglicised word. F. petit. Attorney-General v. Euraford Chemical Worlrs, 38 F. E. 618 (1876). See 4 ' Bl. Stat. 37 Com. 248; 2 Euss. Cr. 479. & 38 Vict. c. 36. » E. S. § 5434. < E. S. § 54315. •107D. S. 507; 29V7is. 197. «Bergen v. Jones, 4 Meto., Mass., 376 (1842), Shaw, C. J.; 67 N. Y. 547; 48 Miss. 36. • See Atchison, &c. E. Co. v. Eice, 36 Kan. 599 (1887). « PLEDGE New, Special; MtjLTrpARiousNEss; Negative; Paper, Oyer; Practice; Procedure; Profeht; Protestation; Eepugnant; Said; State, 1; Surplus ase; 5; Traverse; Videlicet. PLEDGE.! A bailment of personal propsome debt erty as a security for or engage- ment.2 A PTLURIES 780 Where there no express agreement, the intentionmode by which the security shall be converted into money, must be implied from the nature of the property pledged and the circumstances of the transaction.* See Bailment; Condition; Factor; Foreclosure Mortgage; Pawn; Eeueem; Replevin; Security, 1, Compare PiGNUs; Vadium. deposit of personal property as security, with an implied power of The thing Pledgee. itself sale PLEDGES. See Doe. PLENA. See Peobatio. PLENE. See Administeaee upon default.' thus deposited or bailed. receives a pledge; a He who PLENIPOTEIfTIARY. Pledgor;* pledger. He who delivers a a pawnor. ; . a chattel is a conveyance of the legal title upon condition, and becomes absolute at law if not redeemed by a given time. A " pledge " is a deposit of goods, redeemable on certain terms, with or without a fixed period for redemption. In a pledge the general property does not pass, as in the case of a mortgage, and the pawnee has only a special property in the thing. He must choose between two reiriedies: a bill in chancery for a judicial sale under a decree of foreclosure, or a sale without iudicial process, on the refusal of the debtor to redeem^ after reasonable notice to do so.^ Delivery of the thing is essential to the completion of the contract. When possession is retained by the pledgor the contract is an hypothecation,* q. v. The pledgee of bills receivable may hand them back to the debtor for collection, or to be replaced by others and collections made thereon are for the pledgee.' When the pledgee parts with the pledge to a bona fide purchaser (without notice of any right in the pledgor), the pledgor cannot recover against such purcl/aser without first tendering him the amount due.^ The possession which is essential need not be actual: it may be constructive; as, where the key of a warehouse containing the property is delivered, or a bill of lading is assigned. In such case, the act done will be considered as a token, standing for an actual delivery. It puts the property under the control of the creditor.* 1 » M. E. plegge, a hostage, security: F. plege, a surety. Story, BaUm. § 286; 37 Cal. 25; 59 id. lOT; 41 N. Y. 241; 2 Kent, 577. Jones, Pledges,-|_l. See also 78 lU. 452; 83 id. 326. if spelled pledge-or, i. e., pledj-or. s < Pronounced as * Pledgcor is v. ; Roberts, 17 E. E. 778, 782U883), cases. Wall. 368-69 (1874): White v. Piatt, 5 Denio, 271 (1848); Casey v. Cavaroo, 96 U. S. Mitchell 'Clark v. Iselin, 21 V. 476-80 (1877), eases. ' 26 Talty V. . Freedman's Savings, &c. Co., 93 U. S. 324- Casey v. Minis- In old English law, the habit or quality of a thing, whether property, real or personal, or an estate or right therein. 2 To deliver a thing in " the same plight and condition " is-a common PLOT. expression.^ See Plat. PLUNDER.* ing The most common meanproperty from persons or to take is, places by open force, as in the case of pirates In another or banditti. (in some degree common meaning figurative), idea of taking property expresses the from a person or place without just right, but not stating the nature or quality of the wrong done.' Embraces robbery and fraudulent taking, or emThus, a vessel may be said to be plunif openly attacked and robbed, but if property be taken from her furtively, in the night time, or after she has been abandoned by the crew." bezzlement. dered, not only PLURAL. Plurality. PLURIES. See Number. See Bigamy; Majority. Many times; L. often; for- merly. The emphatic word in the Latin form of a writ issued after a second writ of a like kind had been returned unexecuted. If the sheriff cannot find the defendant upon the first writ of capias, and returns a non est inventus^ there issues an alias writ, and after that a pluries. writ to the same effect as the former, except that after the words " we command you as we have — " often " *' Cavaroc, 96 U. British of Columbia S. 477 (1877), Bradley, J.; v. Marshall, 11 F. E. 19- (1882). * Merchants' Nat. Bank v. Thompson, 133 Mass. 48&- 87 (1882), cases; Story, Bailm. | 308. 2 Coke, Litt. 221. See 95 U. S. 764; 101 id. 406, 738; 2 Bl. Com. 485. <Gr. plunder, trash, trumpery: to strip of even worthless stuff. » Carter v. Andrews, 16 Pick. 9 (1834), Shaw, C. J. •United States v. Pitman, 1 Sprague, 198 (1852): 14 St. L. 121 R. S. § 6361 United States v. Stone, 8 F. E. s : ; 846-49, 233 (1881); 1 Pet. (1876), cases. » See 3. Bank Darlington, 5 Blaokf. *322(1840); Wright ». Ross, 36 Cal. 428, 441 (1868); 8 Johns. 98: 2 Barb. 543; 43 id. 610; 38 Md. 251 2 Ves. 378. •See 2 Bl. Com. 159; Jones, Pledges, § 23; Story, Bailm. §§ 286, 308; Brewster v. Hartley, 37 Cal. 25 (1869); CoMpu- rarely found in standard law publications. Compare Mortgagor. 'Evans ter, PLIGHT. A " mortgage " of ; TAEE. pawnee. pledge is of the parties, as to the 2 Euss. Cr. 150. Adm. 842; 1 Bish. Cr. L. § 141; PREBEND powers. It serves as a guide to the intentions of the framers, -B-hich is only the first stage on the road to construction. Not being an essential part of a statute, it is frequently omitted. * A recital in a contract declaring the 3. tention of the parties. FBEBEND. An in- endowment in land, or Revocable at the will of the creator or owner: as, a precarious right or loan. See Precaeium. Compare The circumstances of an executor are " precari- ous " ijphen his conduct evidences such improvidence as, in the opinion of prudent men, endangers the security of the trust estate." PRECARIUM. L. A thing held by en- — at the will of another. A contract by which a thing was See Minister, 3 Precedent; Priority; Privilege; Rank. PRECEDENT.^ 1, adj. Going before; to happen or be performed before any right under it can vest or be claimed as, a preced; ent condition q. v. 3, n. An authoritative example. , A decision Describes an expression in a will which requests that something be — recommendatory words. Courts of equity have gone great lengths in creating implied or constructive trusts from such words. The tendency is to discourage extending the doctrine. Whenever the object, or the property, of the supposed trust is not certain or definite, or a clear discre- and choice to act is given, and whenever prior dispositions Import uncontrollable ownership, the comts will not create a trust from precatory words." Words of entreaty, recommendation or wish, addressed by a testator to a devisee or legatee, make him a trustee for the person in whose favor such expressions are used, provided the testator has pointed out with clearness the objects of the trust, and the subject-matter on which it is to attach or from which tion and be administered.' there be a trust sufficiently expressed and capable of enforcement, it does not disparage, much less it is his beneficiary.* PRECEDENCE. back.* PKECATORY.5 done upon : delivered into the custody of a person until such time as the owner it may be defeat and limit the extent of the interest conferred Precatory. might want when he used them. On the one hand, merely those of suggestion, counsel, or advice, intended only to influence, and not to take away the discretion of the legatee growing out of the right to use and dispose of the propertj^ given as his own. On the other hand, the language may be imperative in fact, though not in form, conveying the intention of the testator in words equivalent to a command, and leaving to the legatee no discretion to defeat his wishes, although there may be a discretion to accomplish them by a choice of methods, or even to the words prebendary. 2 PRECAKIOITS. defeat it, to call it "precatory." The question of its existence depends, after all, upon the intention of the testator as expressed by the words he has used, according to their natural meaning, modified only by the context and the situation and circumstances of the testator See Contract. a pension in money, given to a cathedral or conventual church in prcebendam: for maintaining a secular priest or regular canon as a treaty PRECINCT 799 to arise U cited in support of a proposi- See further Decisum, Stare, etc. A draught of a deed, pleading, will, or other instrument serviceable as a model or tion.' form. As the of a law book, " precedents " denotes a forms approved by usage and, perhaps, title collection of by judicial decision. PRECEPT. A command or mandate in Of equal import with writ or proSee Precipe. cess.-' PRECINCT. The limits of an officer's jurisdiction, or of an election district. writing. As used in the return to a process, the ter- ritory within which the officer may legally discharge the duties of his office.* general word, indicating any district marked out and defined. In a given connec- A may signify a district inferior to a county and superior to a township." tion, Copeland v. Memphis, &c. R. Co., 3 Woods, 600 Pet. *317 (1835); (1878), Woods, J.; Beard v. Eowan. 9 Smith, 76 Va. 484-85 (1882), cases; IB Irish Law Times; 15 27-29 (1884), cases Pick. 251; 69 Pa. 3.33; Dwar. Stat. 107. Commonwealth Cent. Law Johns. 116; s 1 Randolph 'Shields 4 J. v. v. — In Wisconsin, formerly referred to certain districts having similar functions toithose of towns, and which passed away upon the formation of the first legislative B., 4 C. P. *in a868j. Barb. 61 (1870), Potter, J. Milman, L. v. Shields, 60 See Story, Bailm. §§ 227, 253 6; Hadley, Rom. Law, Colton V. Matthews, J. (1885), 178. 5 L. precari, to pray, entreat, request. •2Story, Eq. §§ 1086-70. 'Warner v. Bates, 98 Mass. 276-78 (1867), cases, 198-206 Bigelow, C. J. Handley v. Wrightson, 60 Md. 59 Wis. 172, 178-85 (1884), (1883), cases; Knox v. Knox, 1 Colton, 127 U. S. 312-21 See generally 20 Cent, cases; 27 Am. Law Reg. (1888), Law J. cases, 63-66 459-63 (1888), cases; Perry, Trusts, §§ 112-23, cases. '1. Pre-oed'-ent. 2. PrSc'-e-dent. On the value of, see 10 Va. Law J. 582 (1886). • Adams v. Vose, 1 Gray, 58 (1854), Dewey, J. > ; cases; Howard Dec. 365, 369; v. Carusi, 109 U. Hawk. S. 725 (1884); Wills, 159 (1885), cases. 44 Am. Brooks V. Norris, 124 Mass. 173 (1878), •Union Pacific E. Co. -v. Cheyenne, » (1886), Bradley, J. Colt, J. 118 U. S. 524 , PREGNANCY PREJUDICE 801 Preference. A payment to one creditor which will or, possibly, may give him an ad- A woman "with child" is a "pregnant woman,' meaning of a statute punishing assault witliin the with intent to procure a miscarriage.' vantage over others. 1 See Quicken- ing. In the absence, of a bankrupt law, a failing debtor may prefer one creditor to another by a deed, a judg- ment, or other means, except, in some States, by an assignment in trust. The effect may be to delay a creditor not preferred, in fact to prevent his obtaining payment at all; but if the honest intent was to pay ^he preferred debt, the transaction is not invalidated bj the statute of 13 Elizabeth. That statute Is aimed at transfers of property or preferat intended fraud, ences which are not bona fide, but collusive arrangements " to delay, hinder, or defraud " particular cred- — As to pretended or alleged pregnancy, see Reprieve; Venter, 1. Pregnant. In pleading, see AffirmaNegative. PREJUDICE. Fore-judgment, pre-judgment; detriment, disadvantage. A prejudice is a pre-judgment. The popular meaning involves some grudge or ill- tive The mere existence of a desire that a particular may succeed by suit,, judgment, execution, creditor and levy, in obtaining a preference, is not sufficient to establish that the debtor "procured or suffered" his property to be taken on legal process with intent to prefer such creditor, if the proceedings were the usual proceedings in a suit, unaided by any act of the debtor, either by facilitating the proceedings as to time or method, or by obstructing other creditors who Otherwise would obtain priority." If debtors could not give preferences to bona fide creditors, while they yet retain dominion over their property, the transaction of business would be em- will, as See Conveyance, Being with with others, or from reading imperfect newspaper reThe opinion must be upon the merits of the question, and be such as would be likely to bias or prevent a candid judgment, upon a full hearing of child. ports. If one has formed what in ^ome sense might be called an opinion, but which yet falls short of exciting any bias or prejudice, he may consistently discharge bis duty as a juror.* The right to a trial by an impartial jury does not mean that the jurors must have no prejudice or opin- the evidence. 203 (1873), Lowell, J. Carter, 38 Pa. 453 (1861), Wolfersberger, 19 id. 61 (1853); Smith V. Craft, 11 Biss. 347 (ia52); Clarke v. White, 12 Pet. 200 (1886); Lucas v. Claflin, 76 Va. 276-79(1882), Worman v. v. ion as to the policy of enforcing the laws.* See further Bias Impartial, 1 Opinion, 2. The " prejudice " in the mind of a judge which will afford ground for a change of venue refei-s to an opinion in regard to the case, formed beforehand, Jewett V. Noteware, 30 Hun, 194 (1883), cases; Sartwell V. North, 144 Mass, 192-95 (1887), cases; 48 Ala. 376; 10 Cal. 277; 19 id. 46; 4 Del. Ch. 5.36; 4 B. Mon. 296; 13 K. L without examination, or a prepossession; not, an opinion on the questions of law involved; » prejudice against the party personally.' 463; ' (1881), Blatchf ord, J. ; Wilson v. 17 Wall. 483-87 (1873), Miller, J. U. ' S. 434 (18^7), 19 Blatch. 316-17 Bank Jewell t-. itt, or done mission of cases. V. Reynolds, 3 Allen, 609 liability, (1862); Leavitt v. Leav- (1884), cases; or Bish. Mar. 1 - (3) to affect the rights Foss, 12 Allen, 26 (1866); Crehore, 99 Mass. 330 (1867); Hedden v. Farr«. Farr, 2 McArthur, Allen's Appeal, 99 Pa. 198 (1883); State v. Shoemaker, 62 Iowa, 344 Sup. Ct. Mich. (51) (1887), (1884); Sissung cases; 18 Cent. v. Sissung, Law J. 115-16 Am. People, 83 N. Y. 464 Eckhardt State, 12 Ga. 448-50 (1863), Nisbet, J. Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 297 (1850), 8 Willis v. ' Hungei-f ord ; «. v. Noelke, 17 Blatch. 562-63 3 McCrary, 237. Cushing, 2 Wis. *405 Chief Justice. " (1881). V. cases, Choate, J. v. §§ 179-91, cases; 44 1 v. Foss & D. ' 21 N. J. E. 61 (1870); 35 (1875); said B. 112, cases. Shaw, C. J. 4 United States 13 Mich. 452 (1865); Crehore Hedden, is not(l) to be construed as an ad- is v. Woonsocket Rubber Co. v. Falley, 30 F. R. 808, 811-12 (1887), cases; Weil v. Polack, ib. 813 (1887), cases. 5 See Hoffman v. Hoffman, 30 Pa. 417, 481 (1858); Baker v. Baker, 13 Cal. 87, 92-106 (1869), cases; Reynolds Without prejudice. That what of St. Paul, Knight, 123 Colorado Coal & Iron Co., 9 Col. 64-65 cases. As to assignments with preferences, see Campbell (1885), ; City ; ; cases; Tootle v. Coldwell, 30 Kan. 134 (1883), cases; Bump, Fraud. Conv. 220, cases. Brown v. Jefferson County Bank, as to guilt or inno- opinion, or is insensible of any bias or prejudice,"" intends to exclude any person who has made up his mind, or formed a judgment in advance. Yet. the opinion or judgment must be something more than a vague impression, formed from casual conversations band was without knowledge of the woman's condition, either from her confession or appearance.' Strong, J.; a fixed A man cannot be "prejudiced" against another without being "biased "against-him; but he maybe biased without being prejudiced.' Implies nearly the same thing as opinion; a prejudgment of the case, and not necessarily enmity or ill-will against a party. A statute excluding as a juror a person who has " formed or expressed an Existing at the time of marriage by another'than the husband, is ground for divorce, provided the hus- [Re Hapgood, 2 Low. York County Bank is cence.* Fraudulent; Suffer. 2, PREGN-AJTCY. A well as a pre-conceived opinion. judgment or opinion barrassed.* 2 ; disqualifying prejudice in a juror itors.' ' (2) Wheeler v. Lawson, 57 Wis. 402 ( (1863), (1880), Whiton, PRELIMINARY of the party before the law or his standing in court. Thus, an offer in compromise (g. v.) of litigation is presumed to have been made *' without prejudice." A letter marked "without prejudice," and the reply, although the latter is not so marked, cannot be used as an admission.^ When a bill in equity is dismissed without a con' sideration of the merits, the practice is for the court decree that the dismissal is "without prejudice." An omission of the qualification will be corrected. 8 The decree of dismissal is not a bar to a subsequent suit for the same cause of action, if the complainant, in another suit, can obviate the defects to express in its of the existing bill.* PEELIMINARY. Peace, 3, PREMISES 802 Injunction; See Articles of; Peoof. PREMEDITATE. But the time need not be must be suiflcient for some reflection and consideration upon the matter, for choice to kill or not to kill, and for the formation of a definite purpose to appreciable space of time. long. It When the time is sufBcient for this, it how brief it is. The mind acts with a kill. not matters celerity which it is sometimes impossible to measure, and whether a deliberate and premeditated design to kill was formed must be determined from all the circumstances of the case.' The killing must be a pre-determined killing upon and not a sudden killing' upon a momentary excitement and impulse of passion, upon consideration, provocation given at the time, or so recently before .as not to allow time for reflection. This design may be formed at the moment of the commission of the act.* The law leaves the existence of a fully formed by the jury from tent as a fact to be determined To think of in ad- vance; to determine upon beforehand; to in- all the facts in evidence.' See DELmERATioN, 3; .Drunkenness; Murder. PREMISES.* intend, design. Something sent or put be- foregoing statements; already scheme beforehand. ^ A " premeditated design" to kill means simply an intent to kill. Design means intent, and both words essentially imply " pre- fore: meditation." Premeditation does not exclude ant expects to recover. (2) In a declaration, the statements, in the early part, out of which To plan, contrive, or sudden intent, and need not be slow or last long.' " Premeditated " has been invariably defined by the supreme court of Missouri as " thought of before- hand for any length of time, however.short." ' The execution of the guilty purpose must be settled upon reflection. A full and determined pm*pose is necessary, as distinguished from an impulsive fatal act. No particular period of time is requisite, but deliberation must take place. ^ " Deliberation and premeditation " imply that the act has been " done with reflection," " conceived bestill Some time forehand." for deliberate reflection is mentioned 1. A charge of killing with " premeditation " was design or means intent before the act; that is, that the accused planned, contrived and schemed beforehand to kill. killing with " deliberation " means A that the act was determined upon after reflection, and that " the consequences, chances, and means were weighed, carefully considered and estimated." *" A design to kill must precede the killing by some 1 ! s West V. Smith, 101 U. S. 273 (1879), cases. Hoghton V. Hoghton, 15 Beav. 321 (1858). Durant v. Essex Company, 7 Wall. 109 (1868), County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. Field, J. Eagsdale v. Vicksburg, &c. R. Co., 63 Miss. 488 (1884); Mobile, &c. E. Co. v. Davis, 271 (1884). * ; » S. 705 (1880), [Craft V. State, 3 Kan. 483 (1866), Crozier, C. J. » [Hogan ' State V. Harris, 76 Mo. 363 ' People • Simmerman >° ib. V. V. State, 36 Wis. 244 (1874), Mangano, 89 (1882), Hun, v. State, 14 C. J. Norton, J. 262 (1883), Cullen, J. Neb. 569 State V. McGafflu, 36 Kan. 319 ston, J. Ryan, (1883), Lake, C. J. John- (1887), cases, "by pressions, : as, in the ex- reason of the premises," "in consideration of the premises." 2. In a deed, all that precedes the habenthat is, the date, parties, consideration, dum; grant, description, recitals, exceptions, etc' The premises being the part of a deed in which the thing is granted, the habendum, which serves to limit the certainty of the estate, cannot increase the grant.* 3. A distinct portion of realty; land, or lands; tenements, buildings.'?. In common parlance, land with its ap- purtenances. In a conveyance, "the thing demised or granted by the deed." 8 In a policy of insurance on a vessel, " insured premmeans the vessel." In a policy upon a habitation, covers the whole dwellings, out-houses, and appurproperty insured tenances, which together compose the establishment. ises " — "^ ' ' Judge. in equity, the stating part, the defendant's liability gi-ows People Majone, 91 N. V. 'McDaniel Field, bill the narrated facts upon which the complain- necessary.*" that there In a (1) facts introductory matter. ; Hinton, "X". 812 (1883), Earl, J. Commonwealth, v. 77 Va. 284 (1883), J. Drum, 58 Pa. 16 (1868), Agnew, J. which stated be- ' Commonwealth * L. prcemissa (sententia), that v. is forehand. Com. 298; 44 ' See 8 • Brown u Manter, Bl. 'See Bowers v. 81 Me. 416; 15 Md. N. H. 633 Pomeroy, 81 63. (1869). Ohio St. 190 (1871); 4 Duer, 191. 8 Zinc Co. V. Franklmite Co., 13 N. J. E. 331 (1861), Green, Ch. 15 id. 468. "Reidu Lancaster Fire Ins. Co., 19 Hun, 386(1879). " Herman v. Adriatic Fire Ins. Co., 45 N. Y. Super. ; PRESIDENT or of his Death. Resignation, or Inability to discharge Powers and Duties of the said Office, the Same shall devolve on the Vice President, and the Congress may by Law provide for the Case of Removal, Death, Resignation, or Inability, both of the President and Vice President, declaring what Officer shall then act as President, and such Officer shall act accordingly, until the Disability be removed, or a President shall be the. elected." ^ An act approved January 19, 1886 (34 St. L. 1), provides, section one, that " in case of the removal, death, resignation, or inability of both the President and Vice-President, the secretary of state, or if there be none, or in case of his removal, death, resignation, or inability," then each of the following officials, in the order here given and subject to the same conditions as to removal, death, etc., the secretary of the — treasury, the secretary of war, the attorney -general, the postmaster-general, the secretary of the navy, and the secretary of the interior,— " shall act as President until the disability of the President or Vice-President is removed or a President shall be elected Provided, That whenever the powers and duties of the office of President shall devolve upon any of the persons named herein, if Congress be not then in session, or if it would not meet in accordance with law within twenty days thereafter, it shall be the duty of such person to issue a proclamation convening Congress in extraordinary session, giving twenty days' notice of the time of meeting." Sec. 3. The act shall only apply to officers appointed by the consent of the Senate, and to such as are eligible to the office of President, and not under impeachment by the House of Representatives at the time. Sec. 3. Repeals Rev. St. §§ 146-50. " The President shall, at stated Times, receive for his Services, a Compensation, which shall neither be encreased nor diminished during the Period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not receive within that Period any other Emolument from the United States or any of them." ^ His salary is at present fifty thousand dollars a : . . PRESUME 806 . year. 5 "Before he enter on the Execution of his Office, he shall take the following Oath or Affirmation I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office -of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States." * " The Prt*3ident shall be Commander in Chief of the Army And Navy of the United States, and of the Militia : — of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States; he may require the Opinion, in writing, of the principal Officer in each of the ex- ecutive Departments {q. v.), upon any Subject relating to the Duties of their respective Offices, and he shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons iq. v.) for Offences against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment." " He may meet invasion force, previous to or insurrection by military any declaration of war by Congress. * See War. " He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties (g. v.), provided two thirds of the Senators present concur; and he' shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint (g. v.) Ambassadors, other public Ministers (g. v.) and Consuls, Judges supreme Court, and of the other Officers of the all United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments." ^ See Office. "The President shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies (q. V.) that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session." ^ " He shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such Measiu-es as he shall judge necessary and expedient [see Message] he may, on extraordinary Occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and in Case of Disagreement between them, with Respect to the Time of Adjournment, he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper; he shall receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers; he shall take Care that the Laws be : ; faithfully executed, ficers of the and shall United States," Commission all the Of- ^ He and the Vice-President " shall be removed from and Conviction of. Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and MisdeOffice on Impeachment (g. v.) for, meanors." ^ See subjects relating to the Constitution and government of the United States; in particular Congress; Service, 3. Civil. PRESS. See Copy; Liberty, press. 1, Of the ' PRESUME. ter beforehand, To' take or assume a matwithout proof; to take for granted. Infer The law does not See Infer. stronger than presume. is .presume, much less infer, fraud." Presumption. Next to positive is cir- cumstantial evidence, or the doctrine of presumptions. When a fact cannot itself be demonstrated, that which comes nearest to Acts 28 Feb. 1 R. S, 2 Constitution, Art. § 1642; 1795, 3 March, II, sec. 2, cl, 2. sent of the Senate been " 1807. Had made necessary to the con- displace &s well as to appoint, the Executive would have suffered degradation and the relative importance of the House ; of Representatives a grave diminution." 2 Bancroft, Const. 191. 1 Constitution, Art. H, sec. ^Ibid., 1, cl. 6. cl. 7. Act 3 March, 3 R. S. § 153: * Constitution, Art. II, sec. ^Ibid., sec. 2, cl. 1. 1873, c. 22G. 1, cl., 8. 3 Constitution, Art. * Constitution, ^ Ibid., sec. 4. II, sec. 2, cl. 3. H, sec. 3. Seegenerally 2 Bancroft, Const. 166-94; Ai*t. 3 Story, Const. §§ 1410-1572. « Morford v. Peck, 46 Conn. 385 (1878), Loomis, J. PEBSUMPTION proof of it is A logical argument from a fact to a fact an argument which infers a fact otherwise doubtful from a fact already proved.! proof of the circumstances nec- essarily, or usually, attending it: this proof creates a presumption, the contrary which is relied upon An established.! Presumptive evidence proceeds upon the theory that the jiuy can infer the existence o£ a fact from another fact that is proved, and which most usually accompanies it.'* till is A Presumption of law. certain either cases, nectiort or dispenses universally assignable to a particular Derives its force from jurisprudence. Probability not necessary to it. It relieves from producing evidence. Its conditions are fixed and uniform. It is irrebuttable or absolute, and rebuttable or provisional.* is imperative, or force from logic. It requires evidence. To it probability is Its conditions fluct- There are certain departments of scientific knowledge where an entire series of facts or forms may always be inferred from the existence of any one, according to the maxim ex pede Herculem. The conclusion in such cases is deduced from the observed uniformity of physical nature, which by a necessity of our own minds we believe to be invariable. But this mode of reasoning has but a very limited application in the law of evidence as judicially applied to ascertain the facts and motives of human conduct. It is the foundation of the doctrine of presumptions to the extent to which they are admitted. ^ Psychological presumptions. These are of knowledge of law; of ^ fact from a known fact; of innocence; of love of life; of good faith; of sanity; of prudence; against danger; as to supremacy of husband; subject.^ It is founded upon the first principles of justice, a law 01" laws of nature, or the experienced course of human conduct and affairs, and the connection usuaUy found to exist between certain things.^ Conclusive, its uate. ^ A judicial postulate that a particular predis with other facts which are known.2 Derives necessary. rule which, in forbids inference of the existence of a certain from its necessary and usual con- fact arising with any ulterior inquiry.' icate PRESUMPTION 807 absolute pre- Rules determining the quantity of evidence requisite to support any particular averment, which may not be overcome by proof that the fact is otherwise.' sumptions of law. of intent as to probable consequences; of malice; against a spoliator.* Physical presumptions. Of incompetency through infancy; of identity; of death; of survivorship in Cases in which the long experienced connection between things has been found so uniform as to make it expedient for the common good that this cormectiou be taken as inseparable and universal,^ and indispu- common catastrophe; table. value; that foreign law Disputable or rebuttable presumptions of law. These are such presumptions as may be overcome by opposing proof that facts, stancy of nature of loss of a a ship from lapse of time.* Presumptions of uniformity and continuance. As to residence, occupancy, habit, coverture, solvency, — of is like our law; as to conphysical sequence, animal hab- conduct of men in masses.* Presumptions of regularity. its, As to marriage, and legitimacy negotiation of paper; judicial proceedings; dates; formalities of documents; appointments of officers and agents; acts of public officers, of business and professional men; of the due delivery of : ; usually together, were so in a given case.* The law infers one fact from the proved existence of its common companion directs how much shall be proved to make a prima facie case, and that that may be overcome by counter-proof.* mere arguPresumption of fact. ; letters.* Presumptions of title. In favor of possession of — not tortious, and independent; and of personalty — as to vessels, and papers; that the proprie- A realty ment upon the facts in a case a natural presumption derived wholly and directly from the circumstances of the particular case, by ; means of the common a road owns the soil thereof; as to ownership of hedges, land covered by water, alluvion, trees, and minerals. Missing links are proven from long possession, and grants from lapse of time. Ap- tor adjacent to experience of man- from use.* Presumption as to payment. This arises after the lapse of twenty years.' " Facts presumed are as effectually established as * facts proved, where no presumption is allowed." plied, also, to licenses kind, without the aid or control of rules of law.* Bl. Com. ' [.3 ' Home Ins. 371.] Co. v. Weide, 11 Wall. 440 See also 26 Ala. 27 N. J. L. ISO, 153; 6 Wend. (1870), Davis, J. Me. 146; 34 N. H. 365; 1 181; 7 id. 66; 97 Pa. 34; 16 2 30; 66 Ind. 438; 11 * Vt. 71; 12 Wis. 257. Greerd. Ev. § 14; ' [1 Wall. 449 1 Improvement thews, Co. v. Munson, 14 • [1 qireenl. Ev. §33; 39 Minn. Greenl. Ev. Cal. 276. § 44; 15. 4 Whart. 173; 107 U. S. 502-3; 71 I J. Whart. Ev. §§ 1240-69. >2Whart. Ev. §§1270-S3. « 2 Whart. Ev. §§ 1331-S9. ' 2 Whart. Ev. §§ 1360-65. * Dickens v. Maliana, 21 How. 383 « (1871). Whart. Ev. ch. XTV. 1 » 1 Whart. Ev. ch. XIV. Roberts u People, 9 Col. 474 (1886), Beck, C. J. Sabariego v. Maverick, 124 U. S. 395 1(1888), Mat1 2 (1858). PRETENSE PRETENSE If the evidence offered conduces in aHy reasonable degree to establish the probability or improbability of the fact in controversy, it should go to the jury.^ Inferences from Inferences are not permitted: only immediate inferences from facts proved. If the presumed fact has no immediate connection with or re^ lation to the established fact it is prima and the facts constituting (1) that the pol- (2) that the re- newals were paid to the plaintiff's sub-agent; and (3) paid over by the agent to the defendant. ^ A judge, in deciding that evidence of a particular circumstance is not receivable, impliedly decides that no presumption can be drawn from it which ought to have effect with the jury. A presumption which the jury is to draw is not a circumstance in proof, and it is not, therefore, a legitimate foundation for a presumption. There is no " open and visible connection " between the facts out of which the two presumptions arise.* An inference from an inference, if allowed at all, has little probative force.* See PRiESUMPTio Evidence. ; Representation; simula- tion; device. False pretenses. The offense of " obtaining property by false pretenses." Four things must concur: an intent An offense ; of facts to come into existence. two things are necessary, viz., that it should statement likely to impose upon one exercising common prudence and caution, and that it should be the statement of an existing fact; A " promissory " statement is not, ordinarily, the subject either of an indictment or of an action. The law also gives a different effect to promissory statements based upon general knowledge, information^ and judgment, and to representations which, from knowledge peculiarly his own, a party may certainly loiow will prove to be be^ a true or false.* Collecting money by falsely personating property), the offense 30 Geo. II (1757), — ' knowingly and designedly, by false prepei-son money, goods, wares, or merchandise, with intent to cheat and defraud any person of the same;" and from S4 and 25 Vict, (1861), c. 96 — obtaining "any chattel, money, or "from any other valuable security with intent to defraud." some * fact or circum- which stance, calculated to mislead, is not 1 Home Ins. 2 Unite4 States Co. v. v. Weide, Wall. 440 (1871). Ross, 92 U. S. 283-84 (1875), 11 Strong, ; V. Mitchell, 35 Pa. 446-47 (1860), Strong, J.; McAleer v. McMurray, 58 id. 126 (1868). 6 Ayer v. Glaucus, 4 Cliff. 171 (1870). L. pro&tensus: prce-tendere, to ' « » false pretenses.* false pretenses, is indictable; but otherwise, seems, it New York.'' in Any words equivalent to "by means of a maybe used in the indictment.^ false pre- tense," The indictment must set forth distinctly that there was an actual transaction between the parties, a payment of money or a delivery of property; that it was Commonwealth t!..McDuffy, 126 Mass. 470 spread before, hold s Commonwealth v. Drew, (1879), 4 Commonwealth v. Drew, ante. Sawyer v. Prickett, 19 Wall. 160 (1873), Hunt, J.; Law J. 105-6 (1882), cases. State V. Goble, 70 Iowa, 447 (1883). Zinc V. People, 77 id. 114 (1879), 326-29 (1876), cases; cases 53 ; id. Ill ; 43 111. 397; 57 Ind. 341; 39 Mich. 505; 26 Ohio, 15; 11 Ind. 154; 12 Johns. 293. 966. 1175, 1186-89; (1878), cases. 6*Loomisu People, 67 N. Y. Broom, Com. ' Commonwealth v. Whitcomb, 107 Mass. 486 Wend. 351 (1837). (1871), Walker, 108 Mass. 312 (1871), cases; People v. Ciough, 17 L. 9G3. ton, J. is In England, and Massachusetts, and perhaps in other States, obtaining money as a charitable gift by 6 Spelled also pretence. [Broom, Common Law, Whart. Cr. L. §§ 1130, 2 the owner parts with the possession of his a felonious receiving is "larceny." When he parts with the possession and title (his right of 4Hill,9; 23N.Y.413; 99 Pa. 575; 26 Alb. 698 (1879), Strong, J. out, pretend. When property, 2 J. Grand Trunk R. Co. v. Richardson, 91 id. 470 (1875). 5,Manning v. Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 100 U. S. Douglass a creditor 1 Bardlaugh v. The Queen, L. R., 3 QVB. D. 623 Bramwell, L. J. true. 9 rep- action, thereby. 7 from To make a false resentation the subject of an indictment, or of an constitutes false pretenses.^ * to defraud; =* : A representation of where forth, I understood a knowingly false statement of a supposed by -gone or existing fact with intent to defraud, and an obtaining of property c* 24 offense stated; these facts consist in words, the words must be set variously defined by statutes; as generally tenses," obtaining The . fraud accomplished by means of those pretenses. There must be a scient^^and a fraudulent intent. The representation must relate, to past events: a representation for the future may be only a promise it may be made in any of the ways by which ideas are communicated; and it maybe inferred. The reason of the law is to protect the weak and creduloiM from the stratagems of the artful and cunning; it does not extend to those who, having the means in their own hands, neglect to protect themselves.^ The law gives a different effect to a representation of existing facts, from that given to a representation was held that the jury could not infer icy did not lapse but was renewed; statutes are copied . must be it Thus, the presumption In a case where the ultimate fact was whether a renewal premium had been paid to the defendant, it Many facie imports a misrepre- actual fraud committed; false pretenses used; the it is that a public officer has done his duty does not supply proof of independent and substantial facts.^ PRETENSE.6 false -pvetense inferred, from which regarded as too remote. A sentation as to something existing. 19 Pick. 184r-86 (1837), Mor- e Commonwealth cases. v. PRETIUM the accused's purpose, in making the false pretenses, to effect such a transaction; and that the party alleged to have been defrauded was actually deceived by the See further Cheat; Larceny; Obtain: Spirittjalisu. PRETIUM. Price; value. L. on account of associa- tion or endearment. As, regard for a house as an inheritance or a home, for a jewel as a present, for a picture as an heirloom. Unless expressly provided for, this extrinsic value is not recoverable under a contract of insurance. When, it ever, the law affords no adequate remedy for withholding an article thus enhanced, equity will grant relief by ordering a delivery to the owner." Pretium perieuli. Price of the risk. assumed in consideration of which a risk is in particular, the risk in a contract ; ; of his claim. To be a prevailing party does not depend upon the degree of success at different stages of the suit; but whether at the end of the suit or proceeding the party who has made a claim against the other has successit.* See Costs. Defense, 1 Homicide; Injunction; Police, 2; Prohibition Quia Timet Suffer. PREVIOUS. Compares an act or state PREVENTIOIf. See Crime ; ; ; subsequent in the order of time, for the purpose of asserting the priority of the first.5 Compare Pre- named, to another act or state, Existing Prior. ; PRICE. The sum of money for which an article is in this sense. ^ The price paid for a thing, goodB.2 Prices-current. as, for Prepared by parties furnishing may be used as evidence of the value of the articles mentioned in them. 3 See Book, 1; Science. See also Cash; Cost; Inade<jcacy; Market-price; in the ordinary course of business, Value. PRIEST. leged, See Communication, Privi- 1. PRIMA. See Primus. PRIMAGE. A small payment to the master of a vessel for his care and trouble, paid by the owners of the merchandise laden on board, and for his own personal use, unless otherwise agreed with the owners of the ; also, the equivalent or com- pensation, in whatever considered a gratuity to the master, unIt belongs to the owners less specially so stipulated. PREVAIL. He is the prevailing party, within the meaning of a statute entitling such party to costs, who prevails on the main issue, to a greater extent than admitted by his adversary, though not to the full extent sold used No longer Compare Pr^mitim Premium. maintained still pretium, reward, value, estimation, is some- is Webster shows that "price" vessel.* of insurance. fully times them Price from afiec- affectionis. tion ; value bestowed Payment The Latin equivalent. Cost price. false pretenses.^ Pretium PRIMUS 809 form received, for property sold. The first and general meaning originates in the fact money not because that property is ordinarily sold for or freighters, as an increase of the freight rate.= PRIMARY. First: principal, chief, leading, the best: as, a primary conveyance dbligation, v.), primary evidence (g. v.), {q. See Primus. power. Primarily. " Designed primarily " for advertis" ing purposes was held to mean chiefly or principally intended " for such purposes." PRIMOGENITURE. The rule of de- scent, in English law, that of two or more males in equal degree, the eldest inherits; while females all inherit remogenituxe. The together. Post- right of the youngest son to inherit.^ When the emperors began to create honorary feuds, in order toor titles of nobility, it was found necessary, preserve their dignity, to make them hnpartible, and consequence descendible, to the eldest son alone. in inconvenThis example was further enforced by the iences which attended the splitting of estates.' PRIMUS. L. First. See Primary. Imprimis. In4he first place. See First, Prima facies. Prima facie. At 2. First view, or appearance. first view ; on first appear- ance. ; the word has necessarily such a restricted meaning.' Hudson Iron Co. v. Alger, ante. Buck V. Buck, 18 N. Y. 340 (18.5S). Wall. s Cliquot's Champagne, 3 > Commonwealth v. Howe, 133 Mass. see Allen, J. As to title to the property, 1 , 858 (1883), C. 34 Cent Law " Bened. J. 103 (1887), Eng. cases. 4 I ' ' 1 Story, Eq. § 709. 3 [Weston V. Cushing, 45 Vt. 537 (1873). • Sanger, &c. R. Co. v. Chamberlain, 60 Me. 886 (1878); v. Nowland, 5S Mo. 330 (1873). Lebrecht v. WUcoxon, 40 Iowa, 04 (1874), Beck, J. • Hudson Iron Co. v. Alger, 54 N, Y. 177 (1873), Earl, C. 115 (1805); 1 [Peters v. Speights, 4 Md. Ch. 381 (1853): Abbott, Shipp. 492.] • « Hawkins • 141, 849. F. R. 421 (1883). v. Austin, &c. E. Co., 18 Advertising Publications, Postage on, 16 Op. Att.- Carr Gen. 304 ' 3 Bl. (1879). Com. 314-16. PROSEQUI Legal malice is made out by showing that the proceeding was instituted from any improper or wrongful motiverit is not essential that actual malevolence or corrupt design be shown. The criminal prosecution must have terminated— by a verdict ot not guilty, by an ignoring of the bill, by the entry of a nolle prosequi, or by a discharge of the accused from bail or imprisonment. ^ No action lies to recover a tion of civil suit, damages for the prosecuhowever unfounded, where there has been no actual interference with either the person or the property of the defendant. See Cacse, Probable; Crihs; Indictment; Malice; Sdspioion, Prosecutor. He who carries on or mainany criminal proceeding. Prosecutrix. The feminine form of the Latin word. An ofBcer of government, as the attorney-general, or a district or county attorney, whose duty it is to conduct criminal proceedings on behalf of the people. See Attorney-General. PROSEQUI. L. To pursue: sue, prosePublic prosecutor. cute. To not wish to prose- See Nolle, Prosequi. cute. suffers loss, a non pros., and the plaintiff is be "nonpros'd."^ Compare Non- briefly, as to suit. PROSPECT. See Landscape Light. PROSPECTIVE. See Damages; Re; trospective; Statdte. PROSPECTUS. The purpose pectus of an intended persons invite to company become is of a prosmerely to allottees of the shares, or original stockholders in the a prospectus of an intended company ought not to misrepresent actual and material facts, or to conceal facts material to be known, the misrepresentation or concealment of which may improperly influence and Brewer v. Jacobs, J. 663 (1887), 2-3 F. E. 217-44 (1885), cases; 24 Cent. cases; 26 id. 886-88 (1888); 13 F. 253; 35 Ind. 15, 286; 43 id. 65; 239; 30 Minn. 518; 76 PROSTITUTE. A Mo. M thus female given to in- Common A prostitute. who makes a public prosti- business of selling the use of her person to the of sexual intercourse illicit male sex for thepurpose intercourse.'' illicit A woman may be a prostitute nection with one man and have only; but, to be a " prostitute, her lewdness illicit con- common " must be more general and in- discriminate.* Prostitution. 1. In i(;s most general up for sale, sense, the act of setting one's self or of devoting to infamous purposes in one's power : as, what is the prostitution of talents v. In a more restricted sense, the act or praca female offering her body to an indiscriminate intercourse with men the common lewdness of a female.^ 2. ; Not defined at common law; offenses of the nature not being punishable b.v common-law tribunals. The definitions of Walker, Webster, and Johnston refer to the act of permitting illicit intercourse for hire, an indiscriminate intercourse, or what is deemed '' public " prostitution: common, indiscriminate, sexual intercourse, in distinction from sexual intercourse confined The word has been exclusively to one individual. used in a more loose and general sense."* While the testimony of prostitutes is to be closely scrutinized, credit is not to be withheld if the testimony appears to be worthy of confidence.' See Abduction; Bawd. PROTECTION. fense, "Nor within laws.'" 3 Lowe » Muldoon V. Wartman. V. Chouteau, Paul, &c. R. Co.', 38 Mmn. 242-45 (18&4), cases; 32 Alb. (1885), cases. See 3 Bl. Com. 296, 316, 376. Assault; De- any State shall its jurisdiction the . deny to any person equal protection of the . "^ equal protection of the laws " is meant equal security to every one in his private By ' rights I. 617; 64 ' — in his right to life, to liberty, to 91 1 Peek V. Gurney, L. R., 6 Eng. & Ir. Ap. 377 Simons v. Vulcan Oil, &c. Co., 61 Pa. 202 (1869). Mo. 149 47 N. J. L. 413 (1685). Rickey, 103 Pa. 112 See 1. La. An. 246; 4 Cush. 669; 100 Pa. 94; 13 R. 'Cooley, Torts, 185; Peck 4 who A rendered herself to with men.4 (1886), cases. St. against those R. 673. Law J. may proceed discriminate lewdness for gain.^ But incontinence with one or two may suffice.' woman who is unchaste, who has sur- com- pany. t-. he misled him.' tice of Ifon prosequitur. He does not prosecute. Said of a judgment in a civil action for some default in the plaintiflE, as, a failure to file a declaration or other pleading. Spoken of, Tex. it he is thereby deceived into allottee of shares, and, in consequence, becoming an or abilities, the prostitution of the press, etc. Nolle prosequi. Law mislead the reader; for tute, 3. tains said PROTECTION 839 (1883), cases; Burton 191 (1885); Law J. 2 State V. Stoyell, 54 Me. 27 (1866), Appleton, C. J. s State V. Rice, 66 Iowa, 431 (1881). • Springer v. State, 16 Tex. Ap. 593 (1881), Willson, J. [Carpenter v. People, 8 Barb. 610 (1850), Welles, P. J. Commouwealth v. Cook, 12 Mete. 07 (1846). Dewey, = 18 Cent 124-26, 145-48 » J. (187.3); ; Fahnestock v. State, 102 Paul ' Constitution, V. Ind. 163-63 (1885), cases. Paul, 37 N. J. E. 25 (18&3), cases. ' Amd. XIV, sec. 1. , PROTEST PROTEST 840 property, and to the pursuit of happiness. implies not only that the It means which the laws afford for such security shall be equally accessible to him, but that no one shall be subject to any greater burdens or charges than such as are imposed upon all others under like circumstances. i See Citizen, page 184. The inhibition qiloted was designed to prevent any person or class of persons from being singled out as a special subject for discriminating and hostile legislation. Under the designation " person " a private cor- promissory note. The word, however, by general usage has acquired a more extensive signification, and in a given case may include all the acts which by law are necessary an indorser on such paper.i The formal declaration drawn up and signed by a notary that he presented a [foreign] bill of exchange for acceptance or payment and that that was refused. But, with business men, includes all the steps necessary to charge an indorser.^ to charge Demand poration is included." Legislation which applies to particular bodies or as- imposing upon them additional liabilities, not forbidden, if all persons brought under its influence are treated alike under the same conditions. ^ form and of -payment of a note in proper at a proper time; and, in case of sociations, non-payment, due and reasonable notice to is the indorsers, by any suitable person. PROTEST." A declaration, more or less formal, against an act about to be done or al- ready done, intended to express dissent on the ground of impropriety or illegality, to preserve a right which otherwise might be held relinquished, or to exonerate from a liability which might otherwise attach. 1. Objection, disapproval, dissent: as, to pay money under tary." relating to the recovery of duties paid under protest, a written puotest, signed by the party making it, with a definite statement of the grounds, is a condition precedent to the right to sue for a recovery.® Protests against the levy of duties are commercial documents, and if they are sufficiently formal and accurate to inform the collector distinctly of the position of the importer, the object of the statute requiring them is accomplished. They have always been liberby the courts, and great formality or ally construed fullness is not required.' See further Payment, Involuntary. 3. Referring to commercial paper, in a strictly technical sense, not applicable to demand of the maker non-payment to indorsers.* Mercantile paper which has " gone to protest " said to be dishonored, q. v. of . Protest includes, in a popular sense, all steps taken to fix the liability of a an When indorser. there is is tiie drawer or nothing else in waiver of protest to limit the meaning, the word must be taken as used in that a sense, protest. Duties or taxes illegally demanded may be paid " under protest " and the receiver afterv.'ard be compelled to refund them. Such payments are involun- Under acts In the popular sense, includes and notice bills whether applied to foreign or domestic or to promissory notes. ^ The object of the notice is to enable the indorser to take measures for his own security. The language used should be such as to reasonably apprise the party of the particular paper on which he is sought to be charged.' Supra protest. Over protest: said of acceptance of a bill of exchange by a person not a party to it, after a protest for nonacceptance by the drawee; also, of a payment, by such a person, after protest for non-payment. When a bill is protested for non-acceptance or for any person may accept it siipra protest, for the honor of the drawer or of any indorser. The acceptor personally appears before a notary, with a witness, and declares that he accepts the bill in better security, a Coddington v. Davis, 1 N. Y. 189 (1848), Gardiner, J. Comst. 186; 3 Denio, 25; 1 Pars. Bills & N. 471, 575, 1 Southern Pacific E. Co., 18 F. E. 398 (1888), Field, J.; ib. 450-51, cases. See also Claybrook v. City of Ownesboro, 16 id. 302-3 (1883), 1 ^ County of Santa Clara Pembina Mining Co. v. v. Pennsylvania, 125 U. S. 188 (1888). Mackey, 137 U. » Missouri E. Co. « L. profestari, to bear witness. = Philadelphia v. v. The S. 309 (1888). Pet. 207; 17F. E. 505. 'Nichols V. United States, 7 Wall. 126(1808); E. Herman United States v. Leng, ib. 15 (1883). 579, 582, cases. "Townseud v. Lorain Bank, 3 Ohio St. 353 (1883), Eanney, J. See also MoFarland v. Pice, 8 Cal. 636-37 (1837); Sprague v. Fletcher, 8 Greg. 370 (1S80). s [Ayrault v. Pacific Bank, 47 N. Y. 575 (1872), Allen, J. * [Brannon v. Hursell, 113 Ma-ss. 70 (1873), Morton, J. 2 Bl. Collector, 5 Wall. 732 (1866); 13 §§ 3931-33, 3011-12, oases. ' v. Schell, 18 F. E. 892 (1884), cases, 1 S. Com. 469. Woltord V. Andrews, 29 Minn 261 (1882); Baker v. Scott, 29 Kan. 137 (1883); Annville Nat. Bank v. Ketter' Neg. Inst. §§ 929, 1094Mo. 91; 63 Barb. 467; 7 Hun, 362. « Bank of Cooperstown v. Woods, 28 N. Y. 559 (1864): 19 id. 518; Edwards, BUls, 289. ing, 106 Pa. 531 (1884); 2 Daniel, 95; 42 Miss. 807; 37 Coxe, J. PROVINCE PUBLIC 843 as being within the words as well as within the reason of the law.' An " exception " is of that which otherwise would be Included in the category from which it is excepted~' See Exception, 2. it, PROVHTCE. In a figurative sense, power, authority, prerogative: as, in saying that it is the province of the jury to decide the facts, and the province of the court or judge to decide the law. PBOVISION. That which is provided, arranged, or stipulated for as, the provisions of a contract, of a will, of a constitution, the defendant cannot .give in evidence, in mitigation of damages, matters of provocation on the part of the plaintiff, unless they happened ooniemporaneously with the assault and battery, or so recently as to induce the presumption that the assault was committed under the immediate influence of the passions excited by the provocation.! PROXIMATE, See Cause, 1; Damages; Dominion. PROXY. A shortened form of " procu- racy " procuration, agency. person empowered to act for another, : A as, : is a the or doctrine established by judicial decision provision of law," equally with one enacted *' legislature. 3 a corporation of statute, treaty. A rule to vote a share or shares of the capital stock also, provision in the charter Temporary; for the time being as, a provisional assignee, committee, court, injunction or other remedy. PEOVISIOIfS. See Geoceeies; Health; Maeket Perishable. The "provisions " of a ship mean articles of food — : ; ; the authority itself to thei constituent.'' Shareholders cannot vote by proxy without special by See Provided. PBOVISIONAL. represent so' to do." proxy at the meetings of an incorporated company is not a general right, and the party who clai^is it must show a special authority; but where, rejecting all votes cast by proxy, there is still a majority, the minority are bound.* A shareholder in a national bank may vote by proxy, but no officer or employee of the bank may act The right of voting by or sustenance: her "stores" include wood, coal, and the like.* as proxy." Fat cattle,' Indian corn," wine and brandy,' have been held to be provisions. that require vigilance and attention, con- fiEOVISO. See Peovided. PBOVOCATIOM". See Defense, 1. provocation by words, however opprobrious, will mitigate an intentional homicide, so as to reduce it to manslaughter." In the law of voluntary manslaughter, it is not the degree of the force with which a blow may be struck assault inflicted that constitutes " legal provo- it consists in an assault or battery of some degree which, under the attending circumstances, or by reason of its force, is calculated to create, and does create, sudden heat and passion.^ No provocation can render homicide justifiable or excusable; but it may reduce it to manslaughter. ^o That circumstances of mitigation must form part of the res gestce has been repeatedly ruled." to the circumstances un- to be exercised. "Ordinary care and prudence" imports that degree of care and prudence which a careful and prudent man would exercise in the same circumstances.^ See Cake; Discretion. it is PSYCHOLOGY. See Insanity; Pee- SUMPTION. PUBIiIC.7 cation," but In an action of trespass for an assault and battery Varies with the exigencies forming in degree der which No or an PRUDENCE. 1, n, "The public" are the body of the people at large the people of the neighborhood the community at large the ; ; ; people. Belonging to, concerning, of interimportance to, affecting the people or 3, adj. est or community at large or benefit of ; for the persons all ; accommodation generally also, known. United States v. Dickson, ante. 'United States t;. Cook, 17 Wall. 177 (1872), cases: 1 Ld. Bay. ISO; 1 B. & A. 48. 3 Clark V. Lake Shore, &c. E. Co., 94 N. T. S20 (1883). ' Crooke v. Slack, 20 Wend. 177 (1833), Nelson, C. J. 5 United States u Barber, 9 Cranch, 248 (1815); United States V. Sheldon, 8 Wheat. 119 (1817). « Atkinson v. Gatcher, 23 Ark. 103 (1861). ' Mooney v. Evans, 6 Ired. Eq. 363 (1849). "Commonwealth v. Webster, 6 Cush. 805 (1850), ' Shaw, C. J. » Williams — I Reiser Field, v. Dam. Smith, 71 Ala, 481 § 604; S Sedg. § 266; 1 Sutherl. 17 Dam. Iowa, 468; 17 Mo. = See ' Brown 1 Bl. v. (1882j: Dam. 287; 1. 547; 2 Greenl. Ev. § 93; 1 Waterm. Tresp. Mass. 11; 19 Johns. 319; 637. Com. 168, 478; 1 Paige, 590. Commonwealth, 3 Grant, 209 (1856). Craig V. "First Presby. Church, 88 Pa. 47 (1878): 2 Kent, 894; Angell & Ames, Coip. §§ 127, 131, 493. • v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky. 316 (1382), Har- gis, J. '"Honesty v. Commonwealth, 81 Va. 298 (1886). 11 Bonino v. Caledonio, li4 Mass. 302 (1887); 2 Greenl. Ev. § 267. Opposed, private, q. v. As in speaking of public or a public act, administration, agent, assembly, attorney, « H. S. § 5144. » Fassett V. Roxbury, 55 Vt. 655-56 (1883), Eowell, 28 id. 180; 36 id. 580; 51 id. 131. ' L. publicus, belonging to the people. , J. SET-OFF self of that debt in the existiiig suit, either to reduce the plaintiff's recovery or to defeat it altogether; and, as the case may be, to recover a judgment in his own favor for the balance.! The defendant's case must be made out in the same manner as if he sought to maintain a separate action upon it." At common law, the right was not recognized the defendant had his cross-action. To obviate this circu: allowed mutual debts to be set one against the other, and the matter to be given in evidence under the general issue, or to be pleaded in bar, notice of the particular debt being given beforehand. And 8 Geo. 11 (173,5), c. 24, § 4, enacted that said § 13 should apply to all mutual debts of a different nature except debts acci*uiDg as a penalty, which were to be pleaded in bar.^ The substance of those statutes has been re-enacted in the States generally, and the principle extended. Antecedently, equity, under peculiar circumstances of right, would compel a plaintiff to submit to a setoff,; but, to obtain this relief, the defendant had to file ity of action, 2 Geo. II (1729), c. 22, § 13, a sel)arate SETTLE 944 bill in equity. When the government is plaintiff, no set-off will be allowed, unless Congress has authorized Since the statutes of set-off of mutual debts and have generally followed the course adopted in the construction of the statutes by courts of law, and have applied the doctrine to equicredits, courts of equity They have rarely, if table debts. ever, broken in upon the decisions at law, unless some other equity intervened, which justified them in granting relief beyond the rules of law. On the other hand, courts of law sometimes set off equitable against legal debts. ^ In Pennsylvania, set-off is permitted of claims , this is not in accordance with the general rules of equity. " In Kansas, set-off ia allowed for unliquidated damages.^ Compare Defalcation, 1; Recoupment. which are not mutual, but SETTLE. form of To 1. an interrogatories, determine the set or as, to settle ; —a issue. bill of exceptions, See under Excep- tion, 4. To to gain a right to maina pauper to be settled or to acquire a settlement in a particular township or county.* See Belong. 3. (1) tenance reside ; as, for : The right is obtained by birth, parentage, marriage, continued residence, payment of taxes, exercise of a an apprentice- public office, hiring and service, serving it.* "Offset" has been used, to a limited extent, for set-off. 5 ship, etc., as local statutes pi'ovide.^ To establish one's self upon to occupy, upon as, to settle land. Settler. Within the meaning of preemption laws, one who actually resides upon (8) In equity, that right which exists between two persons, each of whom, under an 2. independent contract, owes an ascertained amount to the other, to set off their mutual debts by way of deduction, so that in an action brought for the larger debt, the residue only, after such deduction, shall be recov- ; reside the land in question.^ The mere existence of cross-demands will not be Indeed, a setoff is there ordinarily allowed only when the party seeking the benefit of it can show some equitable ground for being protected against his adversary's de- See further Pre- emption, 2. 3. Sometimes, to pay; sometimes, to account together and strike a balance by computation ered.6 : ; at other times, to adjust matters in controversy, and strike a balance by agree- sufBcient to justify a set-off in equity. ment.^ mand.*^ "Settle" implies the mutual adjustment of acand an agreement upon the balance. ^ An admission that a money demand has been " settled " is evidence tending to show payment.^ ^he settlement of an account between parties, resulting in a fixed balance, takes the case out of the But set-off is not allowed of a joint debt as against a separate debt, nor vice versa; that is, more generally stated, rights it is not allowed of debts accruing in different — except under special circumstances, as, where ' Cook V. 663; 49 Brown, 31 Conn. 401 (1863), Sanford, J. Bulkley, 49 Conn. 91 (1881). See also Mills, 5 Allen, 37 (1862), Bigelow, C. J.; 64 Mi.ss. Avery v. Mo. v. 572. See 3 Bl. Com. 805; 2 Story, 6 Wall. 488 (1867). 'United States v. Robeson, 9 Pet. *324 (1835); 9 Cranch,236; 39 Cal. 389. 5 Mandeville v. Union Bank, 9 Cranch, 11 (1815). « Adams, Equity, ' 2 Story, Eq. § 1436; Quick v. Lemon, 105 111. 686 0883). 8 2 Story, Eq. § 1437 ; Gray v. Hollo, Blake v. Langdon, = Wulschner v. Sells, Gray v. RoUo, 18 Wall. = St. (1854); 87 Ind. 75 (1882), cases. 682 (1873). Louis, &c. E. Co. V. Chenault, 36 Kan. 53 (1886), Washington, 19 Me. 300 (1841), cases. Eq. §§ 1431-33; Adams, Eq. 222; Chitty, Contr. 12S7; United States v. Eckford, 3 Greene v. Darling, 5 Mas. 212 (1828), Story, J. ; Howe Sheppard, 2 Sumn. 414-16 (1836); Gordon v. Lewis, ib. 633-34 (1837); Hendrickson v. Hinckley, 17 How. 447 " V. fraud has been practiced.* 2Gorham counts, 222. 19 Vt. 492 (1847). <See Jefferson 132 Mass. 499. See Peterson v. St. Paid, &c. E. Co., 27 Minn. 322 (1880); 3 Op. Att.-Gen. 126; 3 id. 182; 16 id. 88, 183; 1 ' Oreg. ' 18 Wall. 632 (1873) u. Whitman, C. J. » 1 Bl. Com. 303-64: 166. See Moore "Baxter v. Hyman, v. State, 9 13 Ired. L. 274 (1862). Wis. *44 (1869); 8 Denio, 225; 9 Barb. 371. • Applegate v. Baxley, 93 Ind. 149 ( Wend. 600; 4 SETTLE statute of limitations, without pay the balance.^ A settled > account an express promise to is Settle up. Referring to the estate of a decedent or an insolvent, means to collect the assets, pay the debts, and distribute the balance, if any, according to law. Compare Administkk, 4. Final settlement. May refer to the payment of the final balance of cash ascertained to be in the hands of an executor or adminleave nothing to be done to istrator, so as to complete the execution of his trust.* Partial settlement. When founded on regular proceedings is oalj prima facie evidence of its own correctness.' A " final settlement " is a conclusive determination of all the past administration.^ When an executor or administrator presents his account, purporting to charge himself with everything received and to credit himself with everything and showing a balance for distribution, and the court, after due notice to parties interested, approves and allows the account, that is a "final settlement " though there is outlying property which may disbursed, come into the accountant's possession for adminis- As tration. to the subject-matter ates the settlement 4. promise to settle property on an intended wife is under the Statute ot Frauds; and, made after marriage, is void for want of a consideration. on which it oper- The deed old doctrine that if the settlor is in debt his void has been generally abandoned. The rule is that prior indebtedness is presumptive, not is now conclusive, proof of fraud. Where there is no fraud there will be no infirmity in the deed. Every case de- pends upon its own circumstances. The vital question is the good faith of the transaction: there is no other test.' The right of a husband to settle a portion of his property upon his wife, and thus provide against the vicissitudes of fortune, when this can be done without impairing existing claims of creditors, is Indisputable. Its exercise tends to the future comfort of wife and The right children. possesses over his make any arises from the absolute own disposition property, power he by which he can which does not interfere with The transfer, moreover, be directly to her: the technical reasons of the common law for conveying through a trustee having long since ceased to exist. A power reserved to revoke or to appoint to other uses does not impair the efficacy of the transfer; nor wiU such power pass to an assignee in bankruptcy. ^ An ante-nuptial settlement, though made with a fraudulent design on the part of the husband, should not be annulled without the clearest proof of the wife's the existing rights of others. may participation in the intended fraud; for, upon its annulment, there can follow no dissolution of the marriage, the consideration of the settlement.^ See Conveyance, 2, Fraudulent. A post-nuptial settlement will be presumed to have been " voluntary." The burden of proof that there was a valid consideration rests upon one claiming a benefit under such settlement.^ — is final. Equity of settlement. The To transfer property, real or personal, for the benefit of another. Whence A void, only prima facie evidence ot correctness. It may be impeached by proof of unf airness or mistake, in law or in fact. If it be confined to particular items it concludes nothing in relation to other items not stated.^ Where an account is settled by the parties with aU the facts equally known to both, and no unfairness is practiced, the adjustment is conclusive.'* yet SETTLE 94,j settlor or settler, and settlement: ante-nuptial, post-nuptial, or marriage settle- right of a wife to have a portion of her equitable estate settled upon herself and her children. Termed the " wife's equity " and her "equity to a settlement." ment, articles or deed of settlement, lawful and fraudulent settlements. Deed of settlement. An instrument by which the use of property is settled upon one or more persons (the beneficiaries), with directions as to the mode and time of holding, enjoying, and disposing of the corpus By marriage, at common law, the husband acquires an absolute property in all his wife's personalty which is capable of immediate possession, and a qualified right in such property as he may, by legal measures, reduce to possession. But, inasmuch as he cannot of the property. The beneficiary to the settlor's wife or intended wife, wife and children, near relative, or creditors. is reach his interest in her equitable rights (as, for example, in an estate vested in a trustee), which interest is even less than a qualified one, without application a, court of equity, in which she must join, that court will not aid him, unless he agrees to " do equity," ' 'Johns West, TO Lantz, 63 Pa. 326 V. (1809); ii. s Hager v. Dufour V. Dufour, 28 Ind. 424 Dixon, v. (1867), Frazer, C. J. U. S. 118(18(M), cases; (60) Bean v. Patterson, 122 id. 4C9 (1887), cases. Prewit V. Wilson. 103 U. S. 25, 24 (1880). cases. Periy ti. Ruby, 81 Va. 317, .326 (1886), cases; Adams Edgerton, 48 Ark. 424 (1886), cases. 3 * V. J. Fulton, 91 U. S. 485 X1875), cases, Swayne, J.; v. Tucker, 87 id. 114-15 (1882), cases. ' Sims V. Waters, 65 Ala. 445 (1880). •Pomeroy v. Mills, 37 N. J. E. 580 (1883), oases, Stevens V. Jones I'. Clifton, 101 U. S. 227-^0 (1879), cases. Field, Clark V. Killian, 103 id. 766 (1880); Wallace v. Penfield, 106 id. 260 (1882): 59 Mo. 158; Moore v. Page, 111 Hart, 11 Wheat. 256 (1826). Thomson, 1 Black, 93 (1861). Perkins Lloyd Ju.stice. > id. 187 (1871). 2 * Moaelland SEVER by making suitable provision for her out of that or other property in the event of her surviving him. The rule applies, also, as against his assignee and, also, when she as plaintiff seeks like relief against her hus; band or his assignee.' settlement by to a parent for life, and, after his death, to his son, sons, or chil- dren in tail, with one or more trustees interposed to preserve contingent remainders.^ In substance, a limitation iirst to the use of the seta contemplated marriage took place, then to the use of the husband and wife for life, with remainder to the use of their first or other sons in tail; this being as far as a limitation could go without the tlor himself until intervention of a trustee." See Perpetuity. The object was to put it out of the power of parents to deal with the corpus of an estate to the prejudice of their issue. SEVER. To separate, divide, disjoin. Co-defendants may either all plead jointly the same defease, or each may plead a separate defense. The latter course is termed " severing " and '* severance." Severable. Susceptible of separation ad; mitting of distinct division, or of independent existence or maintenance : as, a severable — consideration, covenant, contract, g. v. As to severing crops from realty, see Crop; Emblement; Fructus. Several. Separated, separate distinct ; — action, covenant Opposed, joint, Compare Sep abate, 3 Divers. or obligation, fishery, plea. ; A testator directed that his property should be divided after the " several " deaths of persons named. Held, that several v^as not synonymous with " respective; " that the division was to be postponed until all had SEWER. Will apply to an underground ural stream, as well as to a structure used exclusively for surface flpw.s The duties of municipal authorities, in adopting a general plan of drainage, and determining when and where sewers shall be built, of what size ajid at what level, are of a quasi judicial nature, involving the exercise of deliberate In a case in Alabama, six to seven hundred was held the recomincluded in " several " hundred dollars mended limit of credit to a retailer of groceries.^ May mean all, as, " my several children," used in a — judgment and large discretion, depending upon considerations affecting the public health and general convenience throughout an extensive teiTitory. The exercise of such judgment and discretion, in the selection and adoption of the general plan or system of drainage, is not subject to revision by a court or jury in a private action for not properly draining a sufficient lot of land. But the construction and repair of sewers, according to the general plan so adopted, are simply ministerial duties; and for negh- ^ence in so constructing a sewer, or keeping it in rewhich has constructed and owns the sewer may be sued by a person whose property is thereby injured. See Drainage; Negligence; Repair, 3. pair, the municipality SEX. See Citizen SHAIili. Dubess Influence. ; ; As against the government, in a statute construed " may,'' unless a contrary is manifest.^ Construed " must " in order to sustain or enforce an existing right; but need not be, to create a new right." See further May. Whether "shall" imports futurity depends upon the subject-matter and the context.** Shall be allowed. An appeal from the circuit court "shall be allowed". R. S. § 692. This means ynust be allowed, when asked for by one in a position — demand to died.* More than two, but not many. (3) Partition. intention (1) individual: as, a sevei:al the persons Unless expressly declared otherwise, all estates are supposed to be of this sort.' Conapa,re Entirety. See structure for conducting the water of a nat- A Strict settlement. which laud was limited q. V. SHALL 946 it.' Shall be given. An act provided that certain lands " shall be given to Major-General Nathaniel Greene.'* Held, those are words of absolute donation, and convey a present right. ^ Shall be law^ful. The meaning of " it shall be lawful," in a statute, depends upon the subject-mat- will." Severalty. alty, or is sole He that holds lands in sever- he that right only, without occupant thereof, is them in his own any other person being joined or connected with him in point of interest, during his Also termed a " sevestate therein. holds . . eral tenancy." 1 See 2 Story, Eq. §§ 1404-8, 1403; 3 Pomeroy, Eq. 1 3 Bl. Com. 179. Bennett v. New Bedford, 110 Mass. 436 (1872). 'Johnston v. District of Columbia, 118 U. S. 20-21 (1686), Gray, J., citing, as " the leading authorities,!' Child'-u. Boston, 4 Allen, 41, 51-53 (1862), Hoar, J.; Mills V. Brooklyn, 32 N. Y. 469, 495-50O (1865), Denio, See ftlso cases collected, 118 U. S. 20; Gilluly v. C. J. City of Madison, 63 Wis. 528 (1886); Attorney -General V. Northampton, 143 Mass. 589 (1887), cases; Hitchins v. Frostburg, Md. Gt. Ap. (1887), cases; 24 Cent. Law J. 2 133, 411 (1887), cases. §§ 1114 et seq. 2 [1 Steph. Com. 333. * Cairo, &c. E. Co. v. Hecht, 95 U. S. 170 (1877). 3 [2 Washb. " West Wisconsin R. Co. ' Hannibal, &c. E. Co. * ' « E. P. 358. Colton V. Fox, 67 N. T. 352 (1876). Einstein v. Marshall, 58 Ala. 163, 164 (1877). Outealt V. Outcalt, 43 N. J. E. 501 (1886). '2B1. Com. 179. v. v. Foley, 94 U. S. 103 (1876). Board of Equalization, Mo. 304 (1876). ' Exp. Jordan, 94 U. S. 251 (1876). 6 Rutherford v. Greene's Heirs, 3 Wheat. 198 (1817). 64 i STALL To let in a defense that a claim is stale it is not necessary that a foundation he laid in the answer. If the ease, as it appears at the hearing, is liable to the obiection by- reason of laches, the court will, upon that ground, be passive, and refuse relief. Every case governed chiefly by its own cireumstances; sometimes the analogy of the Statute of Limitations is applied sometimes a longer period than that prescribed by the statute is required; in some cases a shorter time is sufficient; and sometimes the rule is applied where there is no statutable bar. It is competent for the court to apply the inherent principles of its own system of jurisprudence, and to decide accordingl3\^ Length of time necessarily obscures all human eviis ; dence, and deprives parties of the means of ascertaining the nature of original transactions; it operates by way STAPLE 964 of presumption in favor of the party in posses- STAND. Pleadings and transactions which cannot be shown to be illegal are said "to stand " and a person who has or has not a right to sue is said to have or not to have " standing in court." Compare St.4.tus. Stand aside. Statute 33 Edw. I (1308) forbade the crown to challenge jurors except ; A for cause shown. rule of practice then which permitted the prosecution to dijurors to " stand aside until the whole arose rect panel be gone through and it appear that there will be a full jury without the persons so challenged." The practice was inherited by and has been us, re- possession are productive of peatedly recognized by the courts. It is precisely the same here as in England, and exists in cases of misde- justice to others meanor as sion. Long acquiescence and laches by parties out of much hardship and i^ and cannot be excused but by shelving some actual hinderance or impediment caused by the fraud or concealment of the party in possession, which will appeal to the conscience of the chancellor.^ See Delay; Limitation, 3. STALL. See Homestall Marketstall. STALLIOIf. See Horse. ; STAMP. Compare Brand. ing. See Writ- / 1. The act of March 3, 1875, required that every bank check, draft, .order, or voucher for the payment of money, drawn upon any bank, banker, or trust-com- pany, should have a two-cent stamp,^ This act was repealed by act of March 3, 1883. Regard was had to the form of the instrument rather than to its operation, though the device was intended to evade the revenue acts.^ If not attached to a document which the law requires to be stamped, the document is not evidence; but it may be attached before it is offered in evidence.* 2. Although a statute designates stamps as " distiller's warehouse " and " tax paid " stamps, a designation in an indictment as " United States internalrevenue distillery warehouse stamps," and " tax -paid stamps for distilled spirits," will be sufficient — the offense charged being the removal, without destroying, of stamps from a cask of distilled spirits.' See Coupon-stamp. 3. A-S to postage-stamps, see Mail, cases, Swayne, J.; another's interest has been 2 Wagner «. 2 Story, Eq. §§ 1519-20 c; 16 Blatch. Baird, 7 Throckmorton, " Standing by " does not import actual presence, but knowledge under such circumstances as to render it the duty of the possessor to communicate it.^ The expression, often used in discussing cases of estoppel, does not mean actual presence or actual participation in the transaction, but silence where there See is knowledge and a duty to make a disclosure.^ Estoppel, Equitable. Stand by precedents. See Dectsum, Stare, etc. Stand committed. To be committed.* Stand mute. See Mute. STAPLE. A settled, established mart or market. The grand mart for the principal commodities or manufactures of the kingdom, formerly held by act of Parliament, in certain trading towns, and presided over by a mayor. 5 The hereditary customs of the crown, which were certain customs due on the ex- "the staple commodities" of the v. How, 690 (1855); Commonwealth, 100 Pa. 322-23 (1882); Zell v. Commonwealth, 94 id. 272-73 (1880); 14 Cent. Law J. 402-6 (1882), cases; Baldw. 78, 82; 4 Bl. Com. 853; 2 Bac. Abr, 365; Coke, Litt. 166; 2 Hale, P. C. 271; 26 How. St. ' See United States Haines How. materially af- fected. (1876), 661; 4 Cliff. 2S6, cases. V. of a thing being done portation of wool, skins, and leather, were 2. Sullivan v. Portland, &c. E. Co., 94 U. S. 811 To know against one's right and not to protest until styled 1 well as in felonies. ^ Stand. by. 258 (1849); United States 98 U. S. 65 (1878); Spidal v. Henrici, 120 id. 887 (1887), cases; Richards v. Mackall, 124 id. Shackleford, 18 v. 187-88 (1888), cases; Bell v. Hndson, 78 Cal. 287 (1887), cases: 2 Am. St. E. 796-808 (1888), cases; 1 Pom. Eq. Tr. 1281;92E. C. L. 92; 7 Watts, 586; 37Pa.54-55; IBish. §§ 418-19. M., Juries, 147. 1875: 1 Sup. E. S. 132; E. S. § 3418. ' Act 3 March, « 22 St. L. 488, c. 121. United States i-. Isham, 17 Wall. 496(1873). «R. S. |§ 3431-22; 1 Whart. Ev. §§ 697-99; 47 N. Y. 467; 58 Pa. 176; 82 id. 280; 39 Vt. 412; 26 Wis. 163. 6 ' United-States v. Bayaud, 16 F. E. 376 (1883): E.S.§ 3324. Cr. Proc, § 938; 2 2 Hatling » Anderson liott, C. J. N. H. v. Whart. Am. Cr. L. Eodman, § 2966; 6 Ind. 292 (1855); 8 Blackf. 47. 386, 384-S5 (1660), cases. Young & Hubble, 93 Ind. 573 (1883), cases, ElSee generally Richardson v. Pickering, 41 v. V. Makepe«ioe, 103 Mass. 57 \ '2B1. Com.160. * Thomp. (1869). TREE TREE. See At, 2; Boundary; Crop; Emblements Fixtuees Land Logs Per; ; ; ; sonalty; Stump: Timber. TRESPASS.2 any transgression or ofifense against the law of nature, of society, or of the country in which we live, whether it relates to a man's person In its largest sense, or his property. 3 means misdemeanor.* Also, a form of action, at common law, to recover damages for any wrongful use of force. Beating another is a which an armis (with force trespass, for action of trespass vi et and arms) in assault and battery will lie; taking or detaining a man's goods is a trespass, for which a similar action, or an action on the case in trover and conversion, is given by the law; so, also, non-pei'formance of a promise or undertaking is a trespass, upon which an action of trespass on the case in is grounded. an action of trespass is vi et armis lie.' Trespass on the case is a universal rem- edy, given for all personal wrongs and injuries without force or unaccompanied by force so called because the plaintiff's whole ; case or cause of complaint is set forth at length in the original writ.^ In the sense of a wrong to a man's lands, tenements, or hereditaments, trespass signifies no more than an entry on another man's ground without lawful authority, and doing some damage, however inconsiderable, to Grandona v. Lovdal, 70 Cal. 162 B. 390; Wood, Nuis. ' F. trespasser, to pass over or ' 3 El. Com. (1882); 107 3 Bl. • 3 Bl. ' 3 Bl. Mass. § 112. trespass, one porary, in the soil, and actual possession by entry; having the freehold is not enough. by ansvi'erable for trespasses A man is also his cattle, ' or fowls, as see Damaoe-feasant. In trespasses of a permanent nature, where the injury is renewed, the declaration may allege the injury as committed by continuation from one day to anIn some 1. cases entry on another's land or into his not accounted trespass; as, an entry to demoney there payable, or to execute in*a legal manner the process of the law. The keeper of a public house gives a general license to enter his doors. A landlord may justify entering to distrain for rent; house mand is or pay and a reversioner to see if any waste be committed on the estate, from the apparent necessity of the thing. But in such cases, where a man misdemeans himself or makes an ill use of the authority with which the law entrusts him, he shall be accounted a trespasser ab initio; as, if one comes into a tavern and will not go out in a reasonable time, this wrongful act affects and has relation back to his first entry, and makes the whole a trespass. But a bare non-feasance, as, not paying for an accommodation received at an inn. is only a breach of contract. A mere omission of duty, or neglect to do what another has a right to exact, or any other mere nonfeasance, does not amount to such an abuse of authority as will render the party a trespasser ab initio. Not doing a thing is not a trespass.* The criterion of "trespass" is force directly applied.' The force may be sufih as is implied in law. As the law always implies force where the injury is immediate to the person or property of another, the sub" trespass " and stantial distinction between actions of " case " is between direct and immediate, and mediate or consequential, injuries.' In its widest scope, trespass on property is any inIts synonym in law-Latin was jury to property. any infraction of a legal right. In this comprehends not only forcible wrongs, where the damages are direct and immediate, but also acts which are tortious in their consequences.' Where the defendant flred a pistol, the ball from which glanced and hit the plaintiff, and it was found that the injury was unintentional but the result of transgressio: sense (1886). Com. 208; .34 Com. 122. Com. 209-12; it beyond. Ala. 554. 9 111. 170. v. Watts, 48 Com. 209-12; 9 111. it was held that 170. 1 3 Bl. 2 3B1. Com. « 3 Bl. « Averill v. Smith, 17 Wall. 91 (1872), cases. H. "'360 (1816). Smith V. Rutherford, 2 S. 208. <1 Bishop, Cr. L. §§568-69,625; State Ark. 58 But, to be able to maintain an action for the must have a property, absolute or tem- Q. V. culpable negligence in the defendant, his real property.' & Every unwarrantable entry on another's the law entitles a trespass by breaking his close, soil will lie; but, if only consequential, a special action of trespass on the case will 234; 16 S. satisfaction is determined far the offense '^ In general, any misfeasance or act of one man whereby another is injuriously treated or damnified is a transgression or trespass in its largest sense: for which whenever the act itself is directly and immediately injurious to the person or property of another, and therefore necessarily accompanied with some the injury by conwas willful or inadvertent, and by estimating the value of the actual damage how other," as see Continuance, In Blackstone^s commentaries, in some connections, assumpsit The quantum of sidering sustained. Overhanging branches are a nuisance; and the person over whoso land they hang may cut them off, or have his action for damages and an abatement of the nuisance. He cannot cut down the trees, nor remove the roots further than they produce damage.' force, TRESPASS 1053 ' Com. 112. 212-14. & •Jordan v. Wyatt, 4 Gratt. 153 (1847). ' Ten Eyck v. Bunk, 31 N. J. L. 429-30 (1866), Beasley, On trespass and negligence, see 14 Am. Law Bev. C. J. 1-35 (1880), cases. TRIAL trespass m' et armis would and immediate direct TRIAL 1054 the injury lie; result of the was the motion recklessly given to the bullet. See further Case, 3; Contribdtion; Damages, Exemplary; Joint akd Sevebal; Malice; Replevin; ToET, 2; Waiver. TRIAJj. The examination of the matter Where a jury is discharged without a verjdict, the proceeding is properly a " mistrial; " the proceeding has miscarried, and the consequence is no trial at all.' New trial. A re-trial awarded for defeat of justice happening at the former trial, of fact in issue.^ In its A re-examination, general use, the investigation and between parties decision of a matter in issue before a competent tribunal; including restricted sense, the investigation of the facts only. 3 The examination before a competent tri- bunal, according to the law of the land, of the law put in issue in a cause for the purpose of determining such issue.* A judicial examination of the issues, facts or whether of law or fact, in an action or pro- ceeding.5 sitting in equity." \ The hearing of a demurrer is a " trial," within the act of March 3, 188".' / The trial of a ca^e i^ not any trial, but the final — the one that' stands as a thing accomplished in the case. 8 In criminal law, an actual trial by a jury and pleadings prepara- not, the arraignment, See Arraign. tory thereto.9 civil cases, trials An erroneous Mistrial. lar trial, due to or fatally irregu- disqualification in a juror or jurors or in the judge, or to an incurable de- fect or deficiency in the pleadings.'" 1 Welch V. Durand, 33 Conn. See 188, 185-86 (1869). also Morris v. Piatt, 33 id. 75, 87 (1864). ^3 3 Bl. Com. [Jenks Bruce 330; 9 F. R. 437. V. State, 39 v. State, *Tregambo MoKee, (1881), Hun, 87 id. v. Ind. 9-10 (1872), Busku-k, C. J. Co., 57 Cal. 505 See also 2 Fla. 573; 63 Mo. 444; 2 444; 54 Wis. 545. Ohio Rev. St. 5187; 44 Ohio St. 528. "Minnett v. Milwaukee, &c. R. Co., 3 Dill. 464 (1875), Nelson, J.; Home Lite Ins. Co. v. Dunn, 19 Wall. 225 5 (1873); Vannevar 339; 80 Ohio v. St. 181 ; Bryant, 21 id. 43 (1874); 118 6 Fisk V. Mass. 40 Ind. 179. 'Lookout Mountain R. Co. v. Huston, (1887), cases; Laidly v. Huntmgton, 121 U. Henarie, 32 F. R. 427 32 F. R. 711 S. 179 (1887). (1887). United States v. Curtis, 4 Mas. 236-37 (1836), Story, J. i» See Wilbridge u Case, 8 Ind. 37 (1850); 4 Blaokt. 309. » once before. ^ least A re-examination of an issue of fact in the same court, after a trial and decision by a jury, court, or referee.* Has always been used in the sense of a complete re-trial of a cause, except in instances. Being a retrial of the facts of a case, defined as a "re-examina' an issue in fact." " The cause is in the same condition as if no Judgment had been rendered, so that the action is- in no sense "new," but identically the original suit. The eri'or is extirpated, and everything else is in statu tion of quo.'^ A motion new for a trial is and the addressed to the dis- court's action is not re- viewable.' To justify granting a new trial, there must be more than a strong preponderance Of evidence in favor of the defeated party; it must be so palpable that the jury have erred as to suggest that the verdict was the result of misapprehension or partial ity.^ The statute conferring jurisdiction upon the Federal courts to grant new trials expressly provides that such power should be exercised " for reasons for which new trials have been usually granted in courts This provision applies only to jury trials, directory to the courts, to be governed by the of law." and is and principles of the common law. The courts common law have usually granted new trials: when of is against the weight of the evidence, or contrary to law; when excessive or manifestly insufficient damages have been awarded; for the admission of illegal evidence, or the rejection of competent evidence; when a party has been deprived of evidence by accident, and without fault on his part, or is taken b.v surprise in a matter that he could not reasonably anticipate; for misdirection upon material questions of law, or for serious irregularity in the trial or misconduct of the jury; for unfair conduct of the prevailing party; when manifest in justice has been done; when the verdict 4.53 (1882). Comanche Mining J. before a court and jury, which has been tried at rules are by record, by inspection, by certificate, by witnesses, and by a jury, qq. v. In issue in fact cretion of the court, In acts of Congress regulating the removal of causes, a trial by jury of aii issue which will determine the facts in an actibn of law; " final hearing " meaning the hearing of the cause upon its merits by a judge trial an of all the steps taken in the case from submission to the jury to the rendition of judgment. In its by surprise, inadvertence, or misconduct.^ ' Fisk ' [3 V. Bl. Henarie, 38 F. R. 487 Com. (1887), Deady, J. 387. « Silvey v. United States, 7 Ct. CI. 331 (1871); Ford u. United States, 18 id. 70 (1883). < Jenkins v. Frink, 30 Cal. 596 (1866). 'Zaleski v. Clark, 45 Conn. 401 (1877), Loomis, J.; , Steph. Plead. 94-98. ^ Lockwood ' See R. V. Jones, 7 Conn. 436 S. § 726; (1829), cases. Indianapolis, &c. R. Co. v. Horst, 93 Railway Co. v. Heck, 102 id. 120 (1876), cases; 17 F. E. 793; 2 N, M. 468, 475. ' Mengis v. Lebanon Manut. Co., 13 Hep. 198 (S. D. U. S. 301 (1876), cases; N. T., 1882), Wallace, J. TRIAL the losing party, who was duly diligent in preparing for trial, has discovered new evidence which will tend to prove a material fact not directly in issue before, or not then investigated, which a different result, and which probably produce not merely cumula- vrill is tive.' In an issue out of chancery, a motion for a new trial is to be made to that court the verdict being only advisory.^ — In criminal cases, a most TROOPS 1055 jurisdictions, new trial will be granted, in on the application of the accused, for cause shown.* Public trial. Not necessarily a trial to which the public generally or a large concourse is admitted. The requirement of a public ; importance. See Calendar, 3; Deposition: Evidence; Jury; List; Peer; Punished, Twice; Record, 3; Slander,!; Venire. TRIBE. Whether a class of Indians have is primarily a question forthe political department of the government.! See Indian. ceased to hold the tribal relation TBIBirNAL.2 A 1. the place where justice trial Is for of the accused; that the public fairly dealt with State trial. In England, a prosecution conducted by the government in particular, a public prosecution of more than ordinary may the benefit see that he is and not unjustly condemned, and 3. Any is magistrate's seat; dispensed. court, forum, or judicial body. See Court; Forum. Tlie tribunal before which matters pertaming to that the presence of interested spectators may keep his triers keenly alive to a sense of their responsi- railroads are discussed, and by which they are decided, may, with propriety, be called a '* court of justice; " and to the importance of their functions; and the requirement is fairly observed, if, without partiality or favoritism, a reasonable proportion of the public is suffered to attend.' not an ordinary court, but a special tribunal authorized to administer justice in a class of cases which experience proves cannot so satisfactorily be tried before the regular courts.^ Except as otherwise provided, the decisions of special tribunals are binding and conclusive adjudications upon all parties, like the judgment of a court of record; and this is true independently of any express bility Separate trial of A trial. single or different each of two or more persons accused of participation in the same offense. Error cannot be assigned for refusal to grant such a trial; the granting being discretionary with the court.* Speedy The constitutions trial. of the States provide that persons held on a criminal charge have the right to a "speedy which was guaranteed by trial," Magna Charta. The meaning is that the a right trial shall take place as soon as possible after found, without depriving the prosecution of a reasonable time for an indictment is preparation. 6 A trial at such a time after the finding of the indictment, regard being had to the terms of court, as will afford the prosecution a reasonable opportunity, by the fair and honest exercise of reasonable diligence, to prepare for a trial." A trial for an offense under a not be such a public trial as is statutory provision termine. Chandler 2 Watt V. v. Thompson, lenged for favor, is favorable or unfavorable.^ The ofHce is abolished in nearly all of the States, the judge who presides at the trial of the cause being empowered to decide upon the fitness of jurymen." TRINODA. See Necessitas, Trinoda. TRIPARTITE. See Part, 1. TROOPS. Conveys the idea of an body of ' « armed war sole occupation is Dick, J.; a magistrate, judgmentseat: tribunus, chief of a tribe: tribus, one of the 30 F. E. U (1880), Starke, 101 U. S. 250-66 (1879), cases. III. 265 (1887). (1868), Lewis, J. United States v. Fox, 3 Monta. 517 (1880), Wade, See also Exp. Jefferson, 62 Miss. 227 (1884). State V. Topeka, 36 Kan. 87-^ (1886), cases. 0. J. whose may city ordinance 93. Spies et al. v. People, 182 [Exp. Stanley, 4 Nev. 116 soldiers intended.* United States v. Williams, 1 Cliff. 17 (1858), cases. «Cooley, Const. Lim. *383; 1 Bishop, Cr. Proc. § 959; Grimmett v. State, 33 Tex. Ap. 41 (18S6). • whose determine whether a juror, chal- or service, answering to the regular army.' The organization of the active militia of a State bears no likeness to such a body. It is simply a do- ' » When a stat- Sewer. 2; office is to ' 1 final. TRICYCLE. See Bicycle. TRIERS, or TRIORS. Persons ••i Steph. PI. making them ute creates a special tribunal to determine a class of questions, it is a necessary implication that the determinations are intended to have force and validity, otherwise the proceeding would be useless.* See De- United States v. Holliday, 3 Wall. 419 (1865). L. tribunal, platform for three original families: fri-, three. ' Smith V. City of Waterbury, 54 Conn, 178 (1886). • United States v. Leng, 18 F. R. 20 (1883), cases. Brown, (1832) ; J. ; United States Belcher ».[4 Bl. v. Linn, 34 v. Arredondo, How. 6 Pet. *729 523 (1800) ; 132 Mass. 43. Com. 363. See Reynolds v. United States, 98 U. S. 157 (1876); 5 Cal. 347; 23 Ga. 57; 43 Me. 11 14 N. J. L. 195; 15 S. & R. • ; 156. ' Dunne u. State, 94 111. 126 (1879), SooH, J. UNAVOIDABLE TJlf AVOIDABLE. See Accident ; Cas- UNBORN. See Child. UNCERTAIN. See Certain. UNCERTIFIED. may be implied from circumstances. It be provided by statute that a grantee shall not be personally liable for an ihciunbrance unless, in some See Certificate. See Condition. he shall expressly have assumed personal words "under and subject" alone shall not be construed to create it; and that such liability shall not be enforced by any person other than he with whom it was incurred, nor continue after the grantee has bojui fide parted with the property, unless there is an express agreement for continuing the liawriting, bUity.' UNDER AGE. UNDERBILLING. Db- than, beneath, below; of, that is, subject to, the law.i Under and subject. Used in relation to the mutual and dependent rights and duties of mortgagees, mortgagors, the grantees of mortgagors and the alienees of such grantees ; also, of rights affected by ground-rents, and other incumbrances. An agreement merely to take land subject to a speciincumbrance is not an agreement to assume and pay the incumbrance. The grantee of an equity of redemption, without words in the grant importing in some form that he assumes the payment of a mortgage, does not bind himself personally to pay the debt. To make him personally liable, there must be words importing that he will pay the debt.' " In Pennsylvania, a conveyance of land under and subject " to a mortgage executed by the grantor crefied of indemnity to the grantor on the part of the grantee. If the grantee aliens by a deed containing the same " under and subject " clause, ates a covenant without more, the alienee does not assume a liabilmortgagee, or undertake to discharge the grantee's covenant of indemnity. The mortgagee may show, however, that the alienee has taken upon himself not only the grantor's duty to indemnify the mortity to the gagor, but a personal obligation to See Commerce, p. 201. UNDER IMPROVEMENT. See Im- provement. I UNDERLET. See Lease. PROTEST. See Protest, UNDER-SHERIFF. See Sheriff. UNDER ; ment, mortgage, or other incumbrance; under sentence; under the hammer. Compare Over, 1. No right can be acquired " under a law " which is not in pursuance See Agent; Dele- gate. subject to; subordinate: as, under a law or jurisdiction under the law under a judg; See Age. UNDER-AGENT. 3. Lower . liability; that the tution. UNDER. . may UNCONSCIONABLE. See Conscience. UNCONSTITUTIONAL. See Consti- •fense, stipulations in the taking UNCLAIMED. See Claim. UNCLE. See Consanguinity. UNCOLLECTIBLE. See Collect. UNCONDITIONAL, or UNCONDI- UNCONTESTED. See Contest. UNDE. See Dower, Writ of. UNDECIDED. See Decision. UNDENIED. See Admission, 3; The evidence may consist of debt. deed, of written articles outside of its terms, or of a verbal contemporaneous agreement; and the under- .UALTY. TIONED. UNDERTAKEE 1067 UNDERSTANDING. An 1. ambiguous word, unless accompanied by an expression showing that it constitutes a meeting of minds as to something respecting which the parties intend to be bound. It may be used to express the expectation of confidence which upon parties frequently are willing to rely without their exacting a binding stipulation. 2 "Understanding" and "agreement" are An understanding is "anysynonymous. thing mutually understood or agreed Upon." « "It is imderstood," in ordinary use, when adopted " it is a, written contract, has the same force as in agreed." ^ It falls short of alleging a distinct, express con- tract.' Expresses a valid contract engagement of a somecharacter." See Assent; Prouisb. what informal UNDERTAKE. To assume, engage; to agree, promise, obligate one's self. The technical word used in declaring upon an engage- or promise of any nature. See ASSUMPCare; Covenant. ment SIT; UNDERTAKER. One who has charge of a funeral. pay the mortgage Merriman v. Moore, 90 Pa. 80 (1879), cases, Paxson, Act 12 June, 1878, P. L. 235; 121 Pa. 139. » LCamp u Weed, 33 Conn. .'529 (1857), Storra, C. J.] s Barkow v. Sanger, 47 Wis. 607-8 (1879), Taylor, J. ' Mills V. Stoddard, 8 How. 366 (1830). !> Elliott V. Sackett, 108 U. S. 140 (188.3), Blatchford, J. ' See also Shepherd ti. May, 115 id. SIO (188.5); Fiske v. Tolman, V2A Mass. 256 (1878); Belmont v. Coman, S3 N. T. 43S (1860); Hoy v. Bramhall, 19 N. J. E. 74 (1868); Fowler v. Fay, 62 111. 375 (1872). J.; Weld. Gray, 170 * Higginson » City of Columbia, 19 S. C. 419 (1883). Winslow V. Dakota Lumber Co., 32 Minn. 238 • Black v. 14 (1859). V. (1884). UNITY UNITY. an of unity 1. The peculiar — of A charter continuing " until the first day of Januthirty-flrst day of December.' " Until " or " till " the next term of court does not characteristic estate in joint tenancy a four-fold is and posses- interest, title, time, See Tenant. sion. USE 1089 2. At common law, a husband and wife were one person, and he that person. of " unity of person " depended the legal rights, duties, and disabilities that either party acquired by the marriage. Hence, the wife could neither sue nor be sued without joining the husband and neither could convey directly to the other a principle which does not now operate, at least in the Upon this principle ary " expires the include any part of that term. And when time is given for filing exceptions until a particular day in a term, a filing " Until all case of a voluntary transfer as a settlement upon the wife.i See Husband. summer June; " until is too late.^ " ordinarily fall." to UNTRUE. — ; on that day Otherwise held where a party had until a certain day for filing a motion for a new trial," the first means to the first of of September.* See True. One; the same. With one voice with one UNUS. L. Una voce. ; sis- sent. Uno acto. Uno flatu. Assent to the same thing in the same sense. See Agreement Assent. 3. In one act by the same act. In one breath in the same ; ; ; UNIVEBSAL. All; Gen- See' Agent; eral; Partnership. UNIVEESITY. See Abode College, 3 Lectures; School; Tax, UNJUSTrPIABLE. ; 3. one utterance. UNUSUAL. See Punishment; Usual. Two is not an " unusual " number, when applied to persons who violently enter premises in dispute." UNVERIFIED. See Verify. breath See Defense, 3; UNWAIVED. See Waive. UNWRITTEN. See Law, Homicide. UlfKNOWN. See Knowledge, 1 ; Contents, 1; Indictment; Owner. UNIiAWPUIi. See Lawi-ul. UNLESS. See Condition Nisi. UNLIQUXDATED. See Liquidate; : Damages. UPLIFTED HAND. See Oath. UPON. 1. Resting on, united with tained UNO. See Unus. UNOCCUPIED. UNOFFICIAL. 3. See Assumpsit; Payment. See Satisfy. UNSEATED. See Seated. UNSOUND. See Sound, 3. UNSUITABLE. See Suitable. UNTAXED. See Tax. 1076, French, 12 111. 1, (1876), cases, V. To employ, 2, page hold, occupy, , . < Abel V. 5 Pike V. "Brown 1 „. Alexander, 45 Ind. 528 Adams V. Williams. 2 Deeds, 37 Iowa, 508 » Gray, 1 (1874). Witt, 104 Mass. 597 (1870). v. Wyman. 56 Iowa, 454 (1881); 55 Vt. 149. L. us%is, q. W. & S. 228 (1841); Courtright (1873); 10 Ala. 414. Conrow v. Conrow, Appeal, 59 Pa. 72 304 (1850). See Use, c. 3. USE.9 •> v. Compare After; On. Then. 67 id. 765. 448; 101 U. S. 228, 243. Kingsley, 120 Mass. 95 1; enjoy, take the benefit of." the parties.2 v. was held equivalent I People V. Walker, 17 N. Y. B03 (1868). See also People V. Crissey, 91 id. 631 (1883). = Corbin v. Ketcham, 87 Ind. 139 (1888), cases. ' Rogers u. Cherokee Iron & Ey Co. 70 Ga. 717 (1883) See Landlord. Generally excludes the day to which it relates, but this construction will yield to the manifest contrary intention of Webster the death " of a devisee UPPER. See Bench. UPSET. See Bid. USAGE; USANCE. UNTENANTABLE. C. J.; Upon See Case, UNTIL. Com. such case means in to " in case of " his death.^ 1. UNSATISFIED. "Upon" "when." Reason; Search-warrant. (3). upon " or " on " a tender of dethe payment, the covenants delivered " of the purchase-money, being dependent. See Cause, Prob- UNRECORDED. See Record, UNREDEEMED. See Redeem. UNREGISTERED. See Register. UNREPORTED. See Report, 1 1 Bl. con- in case of. livery is precedent to See Occupy. See Ofotcial; Report, UNREASONABLE. Kendall ; payment " UNPAID. When Where a deed is to be the 1(3). a ; in, q. V. Breaking and turning over the soil of land does not an improvement "lipon" land, within the meaning of a mechanic's lien law." ; ' Common; Parol; Writing. constitute UNMARKETABLE. See Market. UNMAERIED. See Man, 2 Marriage. UNMORTGAGED. See Mortgage. able; in ; 14 W. N. C. 483 (1884); Roberts's (1868). V. Snow V. Columbian Ins. Co., 48 N. Y. 627 (1872). UXOR " Uttering " a paper is declaring that it is good, with offer to pass it. " Passing " a paper ( VACANCY 1078 an intention or an putting it off in payment or exchange.^ To " utter and publish " forged paper means to declare or assert directly or indirectly, by words or ac- But it does not follow that its derivatives have acquired exclusively equivalent mean- is ings in popular, legislative, or legal usage. ' a note is good, as, in offering it in payment. But such paper is not " passed " until received by the person to whom it is offered.^ "Uttering and publishing " import a disposal or negotiation of a forged instrument to another person.^ The party accused of uttering or passing counterfeit paper must be present when the act is done, privy to it, or aiding, consenting, or procuring it to be done. * An intent to defraud is a material element in the crime of uttering forged paper.' tions, that TJXOB.. L. A wife. Plural, uxores. Et uxor, usually abbreviated et ux., and wife as, in the case of a conveyance from A ; B et ux. to B, or to et ux. : mariti, in right of the husband. See Hus- band. See Homicide. V. An V. abbreviation of vacation, verb, volume; also, of the Latin words, versus, vice, vide and voce, qq. v. Victoria, V. A. V. C. V. Vice-admiral. Vice-chancellor. C. C. cant ; to be void of, free want a lack or thing." from or without, to Vacant lands were lands that were "uninhabited or unculti- Vacant possessions were such as vated." were "free, unoccupied, ownerless." Many derivatives from the English verb retain the exact meaning of the original Latin word. "To be vacant," in its primary sense, is " to be deprived of contents to be empty, or not filled." Usage has warranted the employment of these words in an enlarged and broader sense but the primary and strictly grammatical meaning which they still retain is identical with their exclusive original signification. The result is that "vacancy" aptly describes the condition of an ofiioe when it is first created and has been filed by no incumbent. 1 Vacancy is the state of being empty or unfilled. Vacant lands are unoccupied lands. A vacant house is an untenanted house. An old oflSoe is vacated by death, resignation, or removal. An office newly created is ipso ; Jure uxoris. In right of the w^ife said of a claim made or of an act done by a hustand in behalf of his wife. Opposed, jure Uxoreide. In Latin, the word defined the state and condition of some existing thing at a particular point of time: it had no intransitive power; it meant "to be empty, void or va- Vice-chancellor's See court. Chancellor. V. E. Venditioni exponas. See Ven- DITIO; , . ; facto vacant at creation.^ Vacancy is properly applicable to the ofilce, rather than to the term of office or service;' but the word may apply to the term to which the event causing the vacancy relates.* A vacancy de facto exists where there is an absence from sickness or other cause. A vacancy de j«re imports an entire legal emptiness.* An existing office without an incumbent is vacant, whether the office is new or old.* An office may not be regarded as vacant when an' incumbent lawfully holds over until a successor is duly > VACAKCY; VACANT; VACATE.s "To vacate" has acquired an active sense, through a long period of transition, by popular usage and in consequence of its early adoption as a technical, legal term. " To leave empty; to cease from occupying; to annul to make void," express its meaning. qualified.'^ The reference may be to a case where there has been ; 'United States Mitchell, Baldw. v. 367-68 a failure to elect. ^ (1831), cases, Baldwin, J. 1 Walsh V. Commonwealth, 89 Pa. 425 (1879), Wood- » Commonwealth Searle, 2 Binn. *339 (1810), Tilgham, C. J. People v. Brigham, 2 Mich- 663 (1853); State ward, Horner, 48 Mo. 522 (1871). People V. Eathbum, 21 Wend. 527 fl839); Lindsey «. State, 38 Ohio St. 611 (1882). « United States v. Nelson, 1 Abb. U. S. 135-38 (1867); Green, 2 Wend. 273 (1829). * (bounty of Scott v. Ring, 29 Minn. 404 (1888). » Woodworth v. Hall, 1 Woodb. & M.'a91-94 (1846). » Stocking V. State, 7 Ind. 329 (1855); Clarke v. Irwin, 6 Nev. 129-30 (1869), cases; State v. Jones, 3 Oreg. 637 (1869); State v. Boecker, 56 Mo. 21 (1874); ll3 Ind. 439. ' State ex rel Attorney-General v. Brewster, 44 Ohio •,. ; V. = United States V. N. v. Carter, 2 Oranch, C. C. 244 (1821); Jones, 38 E. C. L. 826 (1841); State J. L. 367-71 (1877), v. Hex Eedstrake,,39 cases; 2 Bish. Cr. L. § 605. 'L. vacare, to be empty: to be void of, free from; to lack, want. ' = J. State V. People Askew, 48 Ark. St. 593 (1886); 9 People 89 (1886), cases. V. V. State v. Howe, 26 id. 696 (1874). Crissey, 91 N. Y. 634 (1883). VACATION In Virginia, the failure of any county, corporation, or district officer to qualify before the commencement of his term of ofQce creates a vacancy in the As to a person suspended from office, the comes as if it did not exist, and he office. ^ may not be entitled the cause of suspension be afterward declared insufficient.' The President shall have Power to fill up all Vacanwhich may happen dm'ing the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the end of their next Session." This authorizes him to fill a vacancy happening during a session and which ' ' cies continues after adjournment.^ administration or trusteesliip is which began and ended on fixed days, aggregated ninety-one days. The vacations embraced all days not included in the terms. The word may embrace the period, after adjournment, in which a court does not sit and transact business, as, in a statute authorizing judgments by confession in vacation; and not embrace all the time the court is not actually in session, or the time of adjournment from land, the terms, . office be- to salary during the period of suspension, although A vacant VAGRANT 1079 any such day . to day. VACATUE. L. Let it be set aside. VADIUM. Law Lat. A pledge. Vadium mortuum. A dead pledge; mortgage. A security with the condition that if money be not promptly the or without an occupant or incumbent from any cause whatever. • dwelling-house does not become vacant or unoccupied when the tenant leaves it for a few hours only the debtor's estate will be forfeited.^ when there received the office unfilled A Vadium vivum. A security to be held repaid A living pledge. by the creditor till he has 5 is a cessation to use it as a dwelling." Vacant lands are such as have not been appropriated by individuals.* Vacate, (l) To leave empty or unoccupied.'' amount of his debt out of the income of the property pledged.- See Pledge. VAGRANT.s One who wanders about, and has no certain calling an idle fellow * a vagabond a tramp, q. v. A person who roams about from place to place, begging, or living without labor or ; ; ; (2) as, to To declare void, deprive of force, annul vacate a judgment or proceeding for irregularity, surprise, or fraud. A writ of error does not vacate the judgment below that continues in force until reversed.^ See Set Aside. VACATION. The two interval between successive terms of a court. Dming this period orders signed by a judge are said to be issued " at chambers," g. u. In this country all courts have terms and vacations. The time of the commencement of every term is fixed by statute, and the end of it by the final adjournment of the court for that term." The English year was divided into four terms of the different lengths, separated by the vacations seasons of the great festivals or feasts, or deemed necessary on account of the avocations of rural busi- — The legal definition of " vacation " is, the period of time between the end of one term- and the beginning of another; and this meaning will be given to the word in a statute, unless it appears that a more popular sense was intended. The intervals between the ness. actual sessions of court when conducting the business of a term cannot be called vacations.'" Under the earlier organization of courts in Eng' Vaughan Mann, v. Johnson, 77 Va. 300 (1883); Johnson v. * Cir. J. [Cline V. Constitution, Art. Greenwood, II, sec. 2, cl. 3. 10 Oreg. 238-39 (1882), cases. 'Laselle v. Hoboken Ins. Co., 43 N. J. L. 470 Sleeper v. N. H. Ins. Co., 66 N. H. 404 (1876). « Marshall v. Bompart, 18 Mo. 87 (1863). (1881); See Walsh v. Commonwealth, ante. Kansas Pacific E. Co. v. Twombly, 100 U. S. 81 (1879). e Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S. 415 (1881). i»Brayman v. Whitcomb, 134 Mass, 526 C1883), C. means of support.'' Any person going about from place to place begging, asking or subsisting upon charity, and for the purpose of acquiring money or a living, and who shall have no fixed place of residence or lawful occupation in the county or city in which he shall be arrested, shall be taken and deemed to be a tramp and guilty of a mis- demeanor.* Any act of begging or vagrancy prima facie evi- Vagrancy is distinct from disorderly conduct and breach of the peace, and includes only such cases of vagabondage as are known to the common law.^ Such statutes, designed to suppress vagrancy, as are in derogation of the right of trial by jury, are to be strictly construed." See Conviction, Summary. A statute authorizing two overseers of the poor, by under their hands, to commit vagrants and paupers to the work-house, is in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment." See Process, 1, Of law. writing, Conkling don, v. Eidgely, 112 111. 36, 40, 43 (1884), Shel- J. Com. 157; 21 N. T. 2 2 Bl. * L. vagari, to wander. [Jacob's 344. Law Diet. 1879, No. 81. See Del. Laws, 1879, No. 223; North Car. Laws, 1879, No. 355; Ohio Act, 1879, No. 191; Mary. Laws, 1880, No. 43; Mass. Laws, 1880, No. 231, o. 257, §§ 8-3; 1 N. T. Laws, 1880, No. 296. ' Re Way, 41 Mich. 301 (1879), Campbell, C. J. * Bullock V. Geomble, 46 111. 222 (1867); People v. » Penn. Act, * id. 287 (1870); Wynehamer v. T Turner, 55 8 426 (1856); 41 Mich. 303, supra. Allen, J. is dence.* » ib. 271 (1883). SteubenvUle v. Gulp, 38 Ohio St. 18, 23 (1882). ' Be Farrow and Bigby, 4 Woods, 492-94 (1880), cases. ' Woods, visible People, 13 JI. Y. Bangor, 65 Me. 120 (1876). See also Ohio St. 184 (1869); Johnson v, Waukesha County, 64 Wis. 288 (1886). 'Portland Prescott v. V. State, 19 VEST A statute, deed, or will is said to vest an him confer upon him estate or property in a person, or to vest with the estate, meaning to ownership in the subject thereof; and an estate VEXAEI 1088 is and to become yested, becomes his property. said to vest, in a person when it The law favors the vesting of estates, rather than upon contingencies.* VETO. L. I oppose, protest, forbid. their resting word in which the Roman and the praetor expressed dissent from a measure proposed by the senate or the Originally, the tribunes, contract for the sale Qf ascertainecl goods " vests " the property immediately in the buyer, and the right to the price in the seller, unless that is not the inten- magistrates. tion.' refuse (executive) assent to a A Devest. To remove, take away, withdraw: as, to devest a person of authority, power, right, title invest. Divest is common, but' not approved. Adjudication in bankruptcy ipso facto devests the debtor of all rights of property. The repeal of a statute does not devest vested rights. See Repeal; Retrospective. Invest. To clothe. (1) To put a thing upon one to confer, put into one's possession, convey the exercise of as, to invest with discretion or authority. to lay out (2) To surround with, place in money, or its equivalent, so as to produce an income to put out money at interest. See ; ; ; further Invest. Vested. Not subject to a condition interest, right ; : as, pre- a vested estate, which may be either present or immediate, or even future but uncotitingent, and, therefore, transmissible, and may be qualified by a condition which does not delay the actual vesting. Other examples are " vested " legacies and remainders, qq. v. Opposed, contingent. An estate is vested when there is a person in being who will have an immediate right to the possession of the lands upon the ceasing of the intermediate or precedent estate; 2 — when there is an immediate right of present enjoyment, or a present fixed right of future enjoyment.' In the widest sense, vested rights are rights which are complete and consummated, so that nothing remains to be done to fix the right of the citizen to enjoy them.* See further Eight, 3 (2); Vested. I Hatch = Tayloe V. Standard Oil Co., 100 U. S. 134 (1879), cases. Gould, 10 Barb. 396 (1851), Parker, J.; 38 v. id. 367. 3 4 Kent, 203; 3 « Moore Sm. v. State, & M. 347. 43 N. J. L. 343 (1881), Van 7 t«igh, 496; 6 Yerg. 164; 4 Q. B. D. 116-36. Sycel, J.; ' bill enactment into a law. Whence veto power, message, Opposed, to property. cedent or unperformed The power in the President of the United and in the governors of the States, to States, " Every proposed for clause. have passed the House of Bill vphich shall Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it becomes a Law, be presented to the President of the United States; If he approve he shall sign it, but if not he shall return it, with his Objections to that House in which it shall have originated, who shall enter the Objections at large on their Journal, and proceed to reconsider it. If after such Reconsidera- House shall agree to pass the be sent, together with the Objections, to the other House, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and if approved by two thirds of that House, If any Bill shall not be it shall become a Law. returned by the President within ten Days (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the Same shall be a Law, in like Mannner as if he had signed it, unless the Congress by their Adjournment prevent its Return, in which Case it shall not be a Law." 2 Failure to sign a bill constitutes what is sometimes called a " pocket " or "silent " veto. This makes the President in effect a third branch of the legislature. Whether the proposed law is necessary or expedient, whether it is constitutional, or whether it is so framed as to accomplish its intent, are tion two thirds of that Bill, it shall from the two Houses to the Presan extraordinary power, to be exercised only in peculiar and marked vested in the President as a guard cases against hasty and inconsiderate legislation, and against any act, inadvertently passed, which might seem to encroach upon the just authority of other branches of government, or on the rights of States or questions transferred ident. . Said.'Vyebster: This is . . . of individuals. 2 VEX. To hara^, trouble, annoy. Said of a second suit or prosecution after another has been fairly tried on the merits and a verdict of acquittal or conviction rendered. " Vexatious litigation " is a common expression. See Vexaei. VEXABI. nQ,y, trouble, ' L. To shake: to molest, an- prosecute, vex, q. v. Fairfax v. Brown, 60 Md. 60 Ohio St, 365. (1883), cases; 50 Mich. 399; 38 !> Constitution, Art. » Cooley, Princ. Const. Law, Works. I, sec. 7, cl. 2. 50, 160-63: 1 Webster's 267; Federalist, No. 73; 4 Madison's 369; 1 Story, Const. § 878; 1 Kent, 239. Works, VOLUNTAS S. Without consideration —a valuable or adequate consideration; gratuitous: as, a voluntary conveyance, deposit, settlement, — trust, qq. v. One who Volunteer. VOTE 1094 — twenty-one years; idence tor a given period; age payment of taxes; and registration; freedom from infamy, q. v.; sanity." See Insanity, 2 (2). At common law, Casting vote. signi- sometimes, the single vote of a person who ordinarily does not vote and, in case of an equality of votes, sometimes, the double vote of a person who first votes with the others and, upon an equality, creates a majority by giving a second vote as, in the New fies, receives a volun- ; tary conveyance,! that is, a conveyance made without a good or valuable consideration. In contests between different volunteers equity will generally not interfere, but leaves the parties where it them as finds to title — their equities being equal. Equity favors a transterree for value, as against a mere voluntary contract of any nature, except, perhaps, n settlement upon wife and children. Exceptions are made, in the cases of bona pie grantees for value, without notice, from volunteers such innocent persons always being favorites in equity.^ See especially Convktanoe, S; Settle, 3. — VOLUNTAS. L. Will; intention; vo- lition. Stat pro ratione voluntas. sufficient reason for its being The will is made.' Voluntas reputatixr pro facto. The will is to be taken for the deed. In cases of treason, the rule at common law was, that the intention to commit treason was sufficient to constitute the crime without an overt act.* Voluntas testatoris ambulatoria est usque ad mortem. The will of a testator See further is ambulatory up to death. = Ambulatory. VOTE.6 The will of a member of a body, formally manifested toward the decision of a question by the body as whole also, the aggregate of the expressions of the will of the ; members.' The word, with its inflections, is used in speaking of the election of and of government. most commonly officers of corpo- rations A " vote " is — but the expression of the will of the whether the formula of expression be by bal- or viva voce.^ lot — A 'Woter" is an elector who votes an elector in the exercise of his franchise or privilege of voting." *' Voting " and "giving in a vote " are synonymous.^** The qualifications of voters are similar in all the Among those generally required are: citizenship, by birth or naturalization; res- States, statute relating to religious corpora- tions. 2 The President of the Senate " shall have no Vote, unless they be equally divided." ^ See Abode; Ballot; Bkibery; Citizen; Election,!; Franchise, 2, Elective; Majority, 2; Precinct; Qualified, 1; Registry; Residence; Suffrage. Cumulative voting. for directors or stands for the reason. The fact that a testamentary disposition is made, voter — York each member " In all elections managers of a corporation, or shareholder may cast the whole number of his votes for one candidate or distribute them upon two or more candidates as he may prefer."* By " whole number " is meant, as many votes for each share as there are directors to be elected.^ / The section confers upon the individual stockholder the right to cast all the votes which his stock represents, multiplied by the number of directors or managers to be elected, for a single candidate. The intent was to work a radical change in the method of conducting corporate elections. The innovation, being made part of the supreme law, is thus placed beyond the power of legislative interference. ^ The provision is unambiguous. If there are six directors to be elected, the single shareholder has six votes, and, contrary to the old rule, he may cast them for one candidate or distribute them to two or more candidates. The ordinary manner of conducting corporate elections is in nowise interfered with. Legislation directing the manner of exercising the right is not required: the provision is self-operative; and it applies to all private corporations, including railway and canal companies.' The purpose of the provision is to enable the stockholders who are in the minority, on any question of administration or policy, to secure representation in the directory or management; but the right to cumulate does not exist unless expressly conferred: each shareholder being entitled, at common law, to but one but not uniform. See McCrary, Elections, § 4. [People ex rel. Remington v. Rector of Church of Atonement, 48 Barb. 606 (1866). I > [Mitchell V. Mitchell, 40 Ga. 16 (1869), Story, Eq. §§ 433-34, 176. See Dietz's Case, 41 N. J. E. 298 'See 4 Bl. Com. 80; 4 Mass. 439. Brown, C. s J. = 1 ' »2B1. Com. ' h. votum, ' [Abbott's • (1886). originally, a vow. Pitts. Law Diet, People V. Pease, S7 N. T. 57 (1863). » Sanford v. Prentice, 28 Wis. 362 (1871), Dixon, C. " State V. Moore, 27 N. J. L. 107 (1858). I, sec. 3, cl. 4. Penn. Const. Art. XVI, sec. 4. 'Commonwealth ex rel. Donnelly 603. a wish; Constitution, Art. * " Leg. v. Tintsman, 23 J. 123 (1876). Hays V. Commonwealth ex rel, McCutcheon, 82 Pa. 521 (1876). s J. ' Pierce (1833). v. Commonwealth ex rel. Pierce, 104 Pa. 154 VOUCH WAGER 1095 and of the .ludges of orphans' courts, " to distinct and definite form of. proof to establish the validity of demands against dead mens' vote on each shar^ for each member of the proposed new board. * SeeCoEPORATioN; Election, 1; Majority, 1; Pkoxy. VOUCH.2 To call upon tors, etc., require — in attestation estates." A vparrant. Vouclier. 1. Calling in a person, to answer in a real action, who warranted the title ; such warrantor him- also, i Negotiable. is true. Vouched by witnesses " imports the same as testified by witnesses, called into court. A note subscribed by two persons cannot be said to be vouched by witnesses, until the persons are called and testify before a court respecting the note.^ Vouchee. person called to attest or " to the defendant ' That municipal vouchers are non-negotiable, see to attest; to affirm, confirm, support, prove; to aver that a thing some VOYAGE.2 A passage by water from one place to another. As applied engaged to vessels State commerce, is from one body of water trips Thus, in a common recovery, the tenant vouched another to warrant his title. If the vouchee appeared, he was made defendant in place of the voucher.* An 3. instrument which attests, warrants, A vouch the confirm and estab- document which serves to truth of an account, or to lish facts of any kind. Evidence, written or otherwise, of the as, that services have been truth of a fact performed, or expenses paid or incurred.' An account-book in which charges and acquittances are entered also, any acquittance or receipt, discharging a person or being evi- to another.' may include several ports. A voyage to some port to another, but Foreign voyage. or place within the territory of a foreign naNot, then, a whaling voyage into the northern seas.* But may include, as within the meaning of the Coasting Act of 1793, a voyage to a place within the waters of the United States, for trade.' See CoDRSE, 1 Deviation Insdkahce, Marine. ; VS. See Versus. VTJLGtAE. See Indecent Obscene. ; w. — ; dence of payment.8 W. In connection with the disbursement of moneys, some written or printed instrument in the nature of a receipt, note, account, bill of particulars, or something of that character which shows on what account or by what authority a particular payment has been made, and which may be kept or filed away hy the party receiving it, for his own convenience or protection, or that of the public." While it is true that receipts are not indispensable, "the imperative duty " of registers of wills, it is still of auditors of the accounts of executors, admiaistra476 o. As to the meaning 1 1 Morawetz, Friv. Corp. § of " majority of votes cast," in popular elections, see Walker v. Oswald, 68 Md. 146 (1887) High License Act contra. of 1888: 27 Am. Law Beg. 516-19 (1888), cases, s F. voucher, to cite, pray in aid of a suit: L. vocare, - to call to or upon. wills, W. Baker v. Coit, 1 Eoot, 235 (1790). « [3 Bl. Com. 300; Coke, Litt. 101 b. • State V. Hickman, 8 N. J. L. 301 (1826). N. T. V. Green, 5 Daly, 199 v. (1874), Daly, 0. J.; 66 Green, 46 How. Fr. 301 (1873): People Haws, 12 Abb. Pr. 202 (1861). B Whitwell V. Willard, 1 Mete. 218 (Mass., 1840), v. Shaw, V. Western D. WAGE.' security; denote See D, District. (king), 3. Swigert, 107 HI. 504(1883), Mulkey, J. See Seal. To also, and wages, pledge, give assurance of a pledge. Whence wager, qq. v. WAGER. 1. A pledge or gage. of battel or battle. Trial by combat. When the tenant in a writ of right pleaded the general issue and offered to prove it by his champion, and the tender was accepted, the tenant produced his champion, who, by throvring down his glove as a gage or pledge, waged or stipulated battel with the champion of the demandant. The latter, by taking up the gage, Wager stipulated to accept the challenge. ' Eomig's Appeal, 84 Pa. 237 (1877), Woodward, 2 F. veiage, voyage; 6 Be George Moncan, » Taber ' The v. J. L. viaticum, provision for journey: via, a way. 2 Abb. U. S. 181 (1870). » The John Martin, •• [Friend v. Gloucester Ins. Co., 113 Mass. 333 8 Saw. 853 United States, 1 a (1873). (1882). Story, 7 (1839), Story, J. Lart£, 1 Gall. 57 (1812); The Three Brothers, ib. 143 (1812). * C!hief Justice. People may WiUiam Washington, Wyoming. WAFER. 476. Brown abbreviation In law-French, interchanged with g: as in wages and gage, ward and guardian, warn and garnish, warranty and guaranty. s [People As an 1. west, western, Westminster, 2. implies » inter- In a policy of marine insurance, the enterprise begun; not, the route taken.* Not limited to the passage of a vessel from one port ; maintains, bears witness.^ ' and tion. self. • in foreign not used of a tug making short F. ivage, gage, pledge. wadium; old Scotch, wad-. L. fas, vod-^ L. L. vadium, See Gagb; Vadium. WITHIN WITNESS 1118 with, to end responsibility in, as, to with- draw from a cause. " Withdrawing a juror " describes a a court may resort when it appears 2, V. To bear testimony to; to have personal knowledge of the execution of an in- which owing to some accident or surprise, defect of proof, unexpected and difficult question of law, or like reason, a trial strument. cannot proceed without injustice to a party. ^ The clerk, under direction from the court, calls a against, a party. juror out of the box, whereupon the plaintiff objects, or is supposed to object, to proceeding with eleven jurors, and the trial goes over to the next term, the instrument, certifying that fiction to that, rights of the litigants remaining unimpaired. The court may resort to this practice rather than nonsuit the plaintift. The costs may be imposed upon one party, be divided between both, or abide the event of May refer to a place or a Compare Contained. Referring to place, may mean on the line or outside period of time. Thus, a horse in the street, breaking down a fence, doing damage " within the inclosure." ^ of. is from May thirteenth includes June twelfth as the last day; that is, the first day is excluded and the last included.'' See further Day. Outside, beyond: as, 1. "without the State; "5 "without the alle" Within thirty days " WITHOUT. giance;" <> With 3. " without the jurisdiction.'' the omission of with the exclu- out any: as, without appeal, or exception; without children, heirs, or issue; without day, defalcation, notice, recourse, reserve, qq. V. "Without being licensed" is of the same import " not being licensed." ' , and effect as "not licensed " or Without this, WITNESS.8 etc. 1, n. See Teatersb. One who gives evi- dence in a cause before a court.' A most general term, including every person from whose lips testimony is extracted to be used in any judicial proceeding. i" "affiant" or "deponent" is always a witness, is not necessarily an affiant or depo- but a witness nent.'" [Abbott's See People v. cases; Winsor v. Judges of New York, 8 Cow. 130(1888), The Queen, L. R., 1 Q. B. *a98-99 (1866J, cases; 3 Chitty, Pr. 917. a Pettit V. May, 34 Wis. 672 McDonald v. '91U. 3.377; ' 9 Mass. (1874). Vinette, 58 Wis. 630 (1883). A. 1 S., u. Thompson, 3 Allen, 508 (1861), witnes, knowledge, testimony. See Wit; 1. Barker v. '» [Bliss V. Attest. A Competent witness. person who is Opposed, incompetent witness. In some States wUls devising land must be attested by competent witnesses, unless wholly written by the devisor, as, in Kentucky. In Pennsylvania the " competent witnesses " who are to prove a will need not be subscribing witnesses.'" In Virginia, by the code of 1873, c. 118, sec. 4, unless the will, about to be attested, be olograph, the witnesses must subscribe as witnesses, though that word need not be used." See further Competent. A witness who is dea person who, being Credible witness. serving of confidence competent to ; testify, is worthy of belief. In some States a will is to be attested by *' credible witnesses. " It has been held that " credible " in this connection means " competent." * In a statute empowering an examined copy to be to. by " credible witnesses," in the made and sworn absence or inability of the clerk of a probate court, held to mean witnesses giving testimony under the sanction of an oath, and who could be cross-examined as to the existence of the record" and the accuracy of the copy.^ See further Credible, 3. A Interested witness. witness who is directly interested in the result of the suit, or in the record as evidence. The common-law rules disqualifying for interest have been generally abrogated, except as to personal communications with a dead paj-ty. See post. A Subscribing witness. person who, being present at the execution of an instrument, at that time and at the request of the Coit, 'Jenkins v. Dawes, 115 Mass. 1 Root, 325 (Coun,, Shuman, 1790). 47 Me. 252 (1859), Appleton, J. 601 (1874), Haven v. Hilliard, 23 Pick. 17-18 (1839), ' Frew V. Clarke, 80 Pa. 178-79 (187B). » Peake • See v. Jenkins, 80 Va. 396 Amory v. Gray, C. J.; cases. (1885). Fellowes, B Mass. *298 (1809); Sears id. *361 (1815); Bacon Hawes v. Humphrey, v. 9 Bacon, 17 id. 135 (1835); Haven v. Hilliard, 23 id. 17-18(1889); Hall u. HaU, 18 Ga. 44-45 (1855); Jones v. Larrabee, 47 Me. 476 (1860); Estep u Morris, 38 Me. 424 (1873). Contra, Windham V. Chetwynd, 1 Burr. 417 (1758), Ld. Mansfield, consid-, Pick. *356 (1830); 456. 'Commonwealth * in his presence. At the time of attestation he must be " competent to testify in court on the subject-matter.' See further Dillingham, 12 97 id. 637. cases. Suit, an Law Diet. ' ' * signs execlited ; sion of, excluding; independently of; with- An One who it was Attesting witness. legally qualified to give testimony. the continued suit.' See Guilty; Noksifit; Retraxit. WITHIIT. Adverse witness. A witness who is toward, or who testifies strongly hostile v. ering 99 Charles II, c. 3. * Dibble v. Morris, 26 Conn. 425 (1857). WITNESS it or, a person who, though not so present, yet subsequently in the presence of the party, who acknowledges the signature and requests him In trials at common law a party to the record could not be a witness for or against himself or his adver- to sign, afl&xes his signature.! At common law it subscribing witness was to be called to prove the execution of the instrument, but never as to a collateral matter; a party was not suffi- and compellable to testify for others. The statutes are remedial, and to be construed accordingly.* See except when the subscribing witness was incaHe is not called when an opponent produces a writing on notice and claims an interest under the writing, nor when he refuses to produce the writing, nor where an acknowledgment makes a writing evidence. An attesting witness proves his own signa- guardians leaves other suitors, including the United States, under the operation of the common law.'* A wife is not given capacity to testify for (or against) her husband." ture only. 2 himself a witness shall create no presumption against him.* Like remedial statutes have been enacted in all the States, Delaware and New Mexico excepted. In a few party, attaches his signature to ; cient, pacitated. A Swift witness. witness who is very eager to testify. Zealous witness. A witness who evinces partiality for the party The tendency is to admit _ WOMAN 1119 who all calls him. persons to testify who ' That enactment was intended to admit the testimony of witnesses previously incompetent on account of interest or of being parties. It introduced a principle extensively adopted in the States.' " Provided, that in actions by or against executors, administrators, or guardiaps, in which judgment may be rendered for or against them, neither party shall be allowed to testify against the other, as to any transaction with, or statement by, the testator, intestate, or ward, unless called to testify thereto by the opposite party, or required to testify thereto by the court. In other respects the laws of the State in which the is held shall be the rules of decision as to the competency of witnesses in the courts of the United States in trials at common law, and in equity, and adall court miralty." action." Huston V. Ticknor, 99 Fa. 238 (1881), Paxson, J. H § ; Whart. Ev. §§.705-40, cases; 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 273- Act 2 July, 1864, § 3 E. S. § 8.58. United States v. Ten Thousand Cigars, Woolw. 125 (1867); Eison v. Cribbs, 1 Dill. 184 (1870). See also Eice » Act3 March, 1865: R. S. § 858, cases. V. Martin, 7 Saw. 338-40 (1881), cases. • Roberts v. Briscoe, 44 Ohio St. 601 (1887); Dudley v. As to testifying to communi- cations with deceased persons, see 33 Alb. 90 (1886), eases. Law J. 1. In a criminal case the defendant, at his own request, a competent witness. shall be But failure States persons charged with homicide own to make may not testify behalf.^ In civil suits a witness may demand prepayment of expenses." N on-attendance, after a subpoena has been is an offense against public justice, and a contempt of court, for which an attachment may issue and a fine, or a fine and imprisonment, be imposed. A writ of habeas corpxis will secure the attendance of an imprisoned witness. By common law in criminal cases, and by statutes in civil cases, a witness likely to disappear before trial may te required to give bail for duly served, his appearance.' On house of Conand Con- calling witnesses before either gress or a committee thereof, see R. tempt, S. § 859, 3. See further Aged; Ancient, 3; Akbest, 3 (2, 3); Call, 1 Communication, Privileged, 1 Confront; Contempt, 1 Crime Decision, Rules of Deposition ; Dumb ; Examination, 9; Expert; Evidence; Falsus, In uno; Going; Husband; Impeach, 3; Infamy; Infant; InSANiTT, 2 (1); Letters, 4, Rogatory; Oath; Opinion, 1; Party, 2; Question, 1; Refresh; Reputation; Slander, 1 ;' Suepcena, 3; Testify; Testimony; Testis; ; ; ; ; ; Turpitude: Vouch; When. WITTINGLY. See Wit. "WOLF'S HEAD. See Caput, Lupinum. WOMAN". May mean any human being of the female sex, or an adult female. In the United States unmarried women have all the civil rights of men; they may make contracts, sue and ' 2 84- Texas v. Chiles, 21 Wall. 490-91 (1874), Swayne, J. Green u United States, 9 Wall. USS (1869); 1 Whart. Ev. §§ 457-90, cases. ' Lucas V. Brooks, 8 Wall. 4B2 (1813). • Act 16 March, 1876: 1 Sup. R. S. 312. » : 4 Steele, 71 Ala. 426 (1882). admissible to testify for themselves, 1 78, cases. 2 all The exception of executors, administrators, and & cases. 2 1 make to Interest, M. S69 a, cases; Cussons v. Skinner, 168 (1843); Hollenback v. Fleming, 6 Hill, 304 (1844), Greenl. Ev. W. is, ' The purpose in preventing a party from testifying, where the adverse party is an executor or administraagainst fraudtor, is to guard the estates of decedents ulent defenses and claims, or unfounded causes of 1 ties in their can furnish relevant, material evidence, leaving the jury to judge of the credibility of each witness. ' In the courts of the United States no witness shall be excluded in any action on account of color, or in any civil action because he is a party to or interested in the issue tried." The purpose of the statutes is to put the paron a footing of equality with other witnesses, that sary. 1 Whart. Ev. (1888), « 1 |§ 464-72, cases; 37 Cent. cases; 4 Cr, O'Neil -0. Law M. Kansas Whart. Ev. § 464. ' 1 Whart. Ev. §§ Law J. 328-32 333, 807. City, &c. R. Co., 31 F. R. C06 (1887); 381-85, 414, cases. As to privileges of witnesses, see 31 Alb. Law J. 144, 183, 244, 323, 344, 383, 403 (1885), cases; as to "utterances," 27 Am. Law Reg. 714-19 cases. (1888), cases, and 36 Cent. Law J. 2-8 (