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  2. Black's Law Dictionary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black's_Law_Dictionary

    An online version of the tenth edition can be accessed through the paid Westlaw legal information service, and is available as an application for iOS devices. [5]The second edition of Black's Law Dictionary, published in 1910, is now in the public domain and is widely reproduced online.

  3. Rule against perpetuities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_against_perpetuities

    Black's Law Dictionary defines the rule against perpetuities as "[t]he common-law rule prohibiting a grant of an estate unless the interest must vest, if at all, no later than 21 years (plus a period of gestation to cover a posthumous birth) after the death of some person alive when the interest was created." [8]

  4. Freeman (Thirteen Colonies) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeman_(Thirteen_Colonies)

    Black's Law Dictionary (9th edition) defines freeman as follows: 1. A person who possesses and enjoys all the civil and political rights belonging to the people under a free government. 2. A person who is not a slave. 3. Hist. A member of a municipal corporation (a city or a borough) who possesses full civic rights, esp. the right to vote. 4. Hist.

  5. Equity (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_(law)

    Before that point in time, the word "equity" was used in the common law to refer to a principle of statutory interpretation derived from aequitas: the idea that written laws ought to be interpreted "according to the intention rather than the letter" of the law. [29] What was new was the application of the word "equity" to "the extraordinary ...

  6. Duress in American law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duress_in_American_law

    Duress is a threat of harm made to compel someone to do something against their will or judgment; especially a wrongful threat made by one person to compel a manifestation of seeming assent by another person to a transaction without real volition. - Black's Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004) Duress in contract law falls into two broad categories: [6]

  7. Tacking (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacking_(law)

    The wider applications of tacking, which concern equitable claims to property more generally, are clear in the definition given by Black's Law Dictionary: 1.

  8. File:BLACK LAW DICTIONARY.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:BLACK_LAW_DICTIONARY.pdf

    File:BLACK LAW DICTIONARY.pdf. Add languages. ... 100.09 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 1,943 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons.

  9. Corpus delicti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corpus_delicti

    Corpus delicti (Latin for "body of the crime"; plural: corpora delicti), in Western law, is the principle that a crime must be proven to have occurred before a person could be convicted of having committed that crime. For example, a person cannot be tried for larceny unless it can be proven that property has been stolen.