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Easemen
A right of passage over a neighbor's
land or waterway. An easement is a type of servitude. For every
easement, there is a dominant and a servient tenement. Easements
are also classified as negative (which prevents the servient land
owner from doing certain things) or affirmative easements (the most
common, which allows the beneficiary of the easement to do certain
things, such as a right-of-way). Although right-of-ways are the
most common easements, there are many others such as rights to tunnel
under another's land, to use a washroom, to emit smoke or fumes,
to pass over with transmission towers, to access a dock and to access
a well.
Ecclesiastical law
Synonymous to canon law: the body of
church-made law which binds only those persons which recognize it,
usually only church officers, and based on aged precepts of canon
law.
Emancipation
Term used to describe the act of freeing
a person who was under the legal authority of another (such as a
child before the age of majority) from that control (such as child
reaching the age of majority). The term was also used when slavery
was legal to describe a former slave that had bought or been given
freedom from his or her master. When Abraham Lincoln outlawed slavery
he did so in a law called the "emancipation proclamation".
Embargo
This is an act of international military
aggression where an order is made prohibiting ships or goods from
leaving a certain port, city or territory and may be enforced by
military threat of destroying any vehicle that attempts to break
it or by trade penalties. The word has also come to refer to a legal
prohibition of trade with a certain nation or a prohibition towards
the use of goods or services produced by or within a certain nation.
Embezzle
The illegal transfer of money or property
that, although possessed legally by the embezzler, is diverted to
the embezzler personally by his or her fraudulent action. For example,
an employee would embezzle money from the employer or a public officer
could embezzle money received during the course of their public
duties and secretly convert it to their personal use.
Eminent domain USA:
The legal power to expropriate private
land for the sake of public necessity.
Emolument
A legal word which refers to all wages,
benefits or other benefit received as compensation for holding some
office or employment.
Emphyteusis Civil law:
a long-term (many years or in perpetuity)
rental of land or buildings including the exclusive enjoyment of
all product of that land and the exercise of all property rights
typically reserved for the property owner such as mortgaging the
property for the term of the emphyteusis or permitting a right of
way.
Emptio or emtio
Latin for "purchase" or the
contract in which something is bought.
Enactment
A law or a statute; a document which
is published as an enforceable set of written rules is said to be
"enacted".
Endorsement
Something written on the back of a
document. An alternate spelling, in some English jurisdictions,
is "indorsement." In the laws of bills of exchange, an
endorsement is a signature on the back of the bill of exchange by
which the person to whom the note is payable transfers it by thus
making the note payable to the bearer or to a specific person. An
endorsement of claim means that if you want to ask a court to issue
a writ against someone, you have to "endorse" your writ
with a concise summary of the facts supporting the claim, sometimes
called a statement of claim.
Endowment
The transfer of money or property (usually
as a gift) to a public organization for a specific purpose, such
as medical research or scholarships.
Entrapment
The inducement, by law enforcement
officers or their agents, of another person to commit a crime for
the purposes of bringing charges for the commission of that artificially-provoked
crime. This technique, because it involves abetting the commission
of a crime, which is itself a crime, is severely curtailed under
the constitutional law of many states.
Equity
A branch of English law which developed
hundreds of years ago when litigants would go to the King and complain
of harsh or inflexible rules of common law which prevented "justice"
from prevailing. For example, strict common law rules would not
recognize unjust enrichment, which was a legal relief developed
by the equity courts. The typical Court of Equity decision would
prevent a person from enforcing a common law court judgment. The
kings delegated this special judicial review power over common law
court rulings to chancellors. A new branch of law developed known
as "equity", with their decisions eventually gaining precedence
over those of the common law courts. A whole set of equity law principles
were developed based on the predominant "fairness" characteristic
of equity such as "equity will not suffer a wrong to be without
a remedy" or "he who comes to equity must come with clean
hands". Many legal rules, in countries that originated with
English law, have equity-based law such as the law of trusts and
mortgages.
Escheat
Where property is returned to the government
upon the death of the owner, because there is nobody to inherit
the property. Escheat is based on the Latin principle of dominion
directum as was often used in the feudal system when a tenant died
without heirs or if the tenant was convicted of a felony.
Escrow
When the performance of something is
outstanding and a third party holds onto money or a written document
(such as shares or a deed) until a certain condition is met between
the two contracting parties.
Estate law
A term used by the law to describe
that part of the law which regulates wills, probate and other subjects
related to the distribution of a deceased person's "estate".
Estoppel
A rule of law that when person A, by
act or words, gives person B reason to believe a certain set of
facts upon which person B takes action, person A cannot later, to
his (or her) benefit, deny those facts or say that his (or her)
earlier act was improper. A 1891 English court decision summarized
estoppel as "a rule of evidence which precludes a person from
denying the truth of some statement previously made by himself".
Euthanasia
The putting to death, by painless method,
of a terminally-ill or severely debilitated person through the omission
(intentionally withholding a life-saving medical procedure, also
known as "passive euthanasia") or commission of an act
("active euthanasia'). See also living will.
Evidence
Proof of fact(s) presented at a trial.
The best and most common method is by oral testimony; where you
have an eye-witness swear to tell the truth and to then relate to
the court (or jury) their experience. Evidence is essential in convincing
the judge or jury of your facts as the judge (or jury) is expected
to start off with a blank slate; no preconceived idea or knowledge
of the facts. So it is up to the opposing parties to prove (by providing
evidence), to the satisfaction of the court (or jury), the facts
needed to support their case. Besides oral testimony, an object
can be deposited with the court (eg. a signed contract). This is
sometimes called "real evidence." In other rarer cases,
evidence can be circumstantial.
Ex aequo et bono
Latin for "in justice and fairness."
Something to be decided ex aequo et bono is something that is to
be decided by principles of what is fair and just. Most legal cases
are decided on the strict rule of law. For example, a contract will
be normally upheld and enforced by the legal system no matter how
"unfair" it may prove to be. But a case to be decided
ex aequo et bono, overrides the strict rule of law and requires
instead a decision based on what is fair and just given the circumstances.
Examination-in-chief
The questioning of your own witness
under oath. Witnesses are introduced to a trial by their examination-in-chief,
which is when they answer questions asked by the lawyer representing
the party which called them to the stand. After their examination-in-chief,
the other party's lawyer can question them too; this is called "cross-examination".
Exculpate
Something that excuses or justifies
a wrong action.
Executor
A person specifically appointed by
a testator to administer the will ensuring that final wishes are
respected (i.e. that the will is properly "executed").
An executor is a personal representative.
Exhibit
A document or object shown to the court
as evidence in a trial. They are each given a number or letter by
the court clerk as they are introduced for future reference during
the trial. For example, weapon are frequently given as exhibits
in criminal trials. Except with special permission of the court,
exhibits are locked up in court custody until the trial is over.
Ex parte
Latin: for one party only. Ex parte
refers to those proceedings where one of the parties has not received
notice and, therefore, is neither present nor represented. If a
person received notice of a hearing and chose not to attend, then
the hearing would not be called ex parte. Some jurisdictions expand
the definition to include any proceeding that goes undefended, even
though proper notice has been given.
Ex patriate
A person who has abandoned his or her
country of origin and citizenship and has become a subject or citizen
of another country.
Ex post facto
Latin: after the fact. Legislation
is called ex post facto if the law attempts to extend backwards
in time and punish acts committed before the date of the law's approval.
Such laws are constitutionally prohibited in most modern democracies.
For example, the USA Constitution prohibits "any ex post facto
law".
Expropriation Canada:
The forced sale of land to a public
authority. Synonymous to the USA doctrine of "eminent domain".
Express trust
A trust which is clearly created by
the settlor, usually in the form of a document (eg. a will), although
they can be oral. They are to be contrasted with trusts which come
to being through the operation of the law and which do not result
from the clear intent or decision of any settlor to create a trust
(eg. constructive trust).
Expunge
To physically erase; to white or strike
out. To "expunge" something from a court record means
to remove every reference to it from the court file.
Ex rel
An abbreviation of "ex relatione",
Latin for "on the relation of." Refers to information
or action taken that is not based on first-hand experience but is
based on the statement or account of another person. For example,
a criminal charge "ex rel" simply means that the attorney
general of a state is prosecuting on the basis of a statement of
a person other than the attorney general himself (or herself.)
Extortion
Forcing a person to give up property
in a thing through the use of violence, fear or under pretense of
authority.
Extradition
The arrest and delivery of a fugitive
wanted for a crime committed in another country, usually under the
terms of a extradition treaty.
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Latin: "Of an illegal cause there
can be no lawsuit." In other words, if one is engaged in illegal
activity, one cannot sue another for damages that arose out of that
illegal activity. A example is an injury suffered by a passenger
in a stolen car, which that passenger knew to be stolen and was
a free participant in the joyriding. If vehicle crashes injuring
the passenger, there is no action in tort against the driver under
the ex turpi causa non oritur actio principle.
© Lloyd Duhaime 1994-1999. The researcher-writer of Duhaime's
Legal Dictionary is a lawyer, Lloyd
Duhaime. For the litigious souls out there with no respect
for the generosity of spirit that goes into this free world wide
web legal dictionary, please be advised that you are using this
dictionary entirely at your own risk with no warranty on content
whatsoever. Also, the information provided in this document is
internationally copyright protected. "Duhaime's Law Dictionary"
does not cover common English words unless they have a distinct
meaning in the law. If you have a good suggested addition for
Duhaime's Law Dictionary, please e-mail
Lloyd at lloyd@duhaime.org but note that this project is volunteer
and he may not be able to research and write the definition immediately
or, depending on how busy he may be with his clients, even find
time to reply.
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