In the process of attachment. A warning to a person in whose hands the effects of another are attached not to pay the money or deliver the property of the defendant in hls hands to him, but to ap-pear and auswer the plalntlfTs sult. Drake. Attachin. S 451; National Bank of wllmlng-ton v. Furtick. 2 Marv. (Del.) 35, 42 Atl. 479, 44 L. R. A. 115, 69 Am. St. Rep. 99; Georgia & A. Ry. Co. v. Stollenwerck, 122 Ala. 539, 25 South. 258; Jeary v. American Exch. Bank, 2 Neb. (Unof.) G57. 89 N. W. 772
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In old English law. A garden. Reg. orig. lb, 2
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
L. Fr. A warren; a prlvi-leged place for keeping animals
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In old Engllsh law. A guardian, defender, or protector. In feudal law, gardio. Spelman
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
A small piece of land, appropriated to the cultivation of herbs, fruits, flowers, or vegetables. People v. Greeuburgh. 57 N. Y. 550; Ferry v. Livingston, 115 U. S. 542, 6 Sup. Ct. 175, 29 L. Ed. 489
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
or GARDE. L. Fr. wardship; care; custody; also the ward of a city
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In Scotch law. Tlthes of corn, (grain.) Bell
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In Engllsh statutes. To sort or cull out the good from the bad in spices, drugs, etc. Cowell
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
L. Fr. In old English law. A warrantor of land; a vouchee; one bound by a warranty to defend the title and seisin of his alienee, or, on default thereof, and on eviction of the tenant, to give him other lands of equal value. Britt, c. 75
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In old English law. A bundle or sheaf. Blada in gorbis, corn or grain in sheaves. Reg. orig. 96; Bract, fol. 209
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In French law. This word corresponds to warranty or covenants for title in English law. In the case of a sale this garantie extends to two thlngs: (1) Peaceful possesslon of the thing sold; and (2) absence of undiscloscd defects, (difauts caches.) Brown
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In old Lombardic law. A gift; a free or absolute gift; a gift of the whole of a thing. Spelman
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In criminal law. The delivery or clearing of a gaol of the prls-oners confined therein, by trying them
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
Officers in ancient times whose business it was to examine weights and measures. Skene
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
A prison for temporary confinement; a jail; a place for the confinement of offenders against the law
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
In Spanish law. Gains or profits resulting from the employment of property held by husband and wife in com-mon. white, New Recop. b. 1, tlt 7, c. 5
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
The time when the bounds of the parish are lustrated or gone over by the parish officers,—rogation week. Enc. Lond
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
The act or practice of play* ing games for stakes or wagers; gambling; the playing at any game of hazard. An agreement between two 6r more persons to play together at a game of chance for a stake or wager which is to become the property of the winner, and to which all contribute. In re Stewart (D. C.) 21 Fed. 398; People v. Todd, 51 Hun, 446, 4 N. Y. Supp. 25; State v. Shaw, 39 Mlnn. 153, 39 N. W. 305; State v. Morgan, 133 N. C. 743, 45 S. E. 1033
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
To game or play at a game for money. Buckley v. o’NIel, 113 Mass. 193. 38 Am. Rep. 460. The word “gamble” is per-haps the most apt and substantial to convey
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
1. Birds and beasts of a wild nature, obtained by fowling and hunting. Bacon, Abr. See Coolidge v. Choate, 11 Metc. (Mass.) 79. The term is said to include (in England) hares, pheasauts, partridges, gronse, heath or moor game, black game, and bus-tards. Brown. See 1 & 2 wm. IV. c. 32
Source: Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Ed (1910)
