Legal Definition and Related Resources of Recordari facias loquelam
Meaning of Recordari facias loquelam
(Lat.) In English practice. A writ commanding the sheriff that he cause the plaint to be recorded which is in his county, without writ, between the parties there named, of the cattle, goods, and chattels of the complainant taken and unjustly distrained as it is said, and that he have the said record before the court on a day therein named, and that he prefix the same day to the parties, that then they may be there ready to proceed in the same plaint. 2 Sellon, Prac. 166.
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This definition of Recordari Facias Loquelam is based on the The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary . This entry needs to be proofread.
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Concept of “Recordari Facias Loquelam”
Traditional meaning of recordari facias loquelam in English (with some legal use of this latin concept in England and the United States in the XIX Century) [1]: (in Latin) An old writ issuing for the plaintiff or defendant, in a suit brought in a county court, directing the sheriff to cause the plaint to be recorded, and to remove it to one of the courts at Westminster; see 3rd Book (“Of Private Wrongs”), Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England 34, 37, 195; COURT, 29.
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Notes and References
- Based on A Concise Law Dictionary of Words, Phrases and Maxims, “Recordari Facias Loquelam”, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1911, United States. It is also called the Stimson’s Law dictionary. This term and/or definition may be absolete.
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