Blacks Law Dict. 1st ed
1174
TITHER
TITLE
TITHEB. One who gathers tithes. TITHES. In English law. The tenth part of the increase, yearly arising and re newing from the profits of lands, the stock upon lands, and the personal industry of the inhabitants. 2 Bl. Comm. 24. A species of incorporeal hereditament, being an eccle siastical inheritance collateral to the estate of the land, and due only to an ecclesiastical per son by ecclesiasticaJ law. 1 Crabb, Real Prop. §133. Prcedial tithes are such as arise immedia tely from the ground; as grain of all sorts, hay, wood, fruits, and herbs. Mixed tithes are such as do not arise immediately from the ground, but from things nourished by the ground; as calves, lambs, chickens, colts, milk, cheese, and eggs. Personal tithes are such as arise by the industry of man, being the tenth part of the clear gain, after charges deducted. 1 Crabb, Real Prop. § 133. TITHING. One of the civil divisions of England, being a portion of that greater di vision called a "hundred." It was so called because ten freeholders with their families composed one. It is said that they were all knit together in one society, and bound to the king for the peaceable behavior of each other. In each of these societies there was one chief or principal person, who, from his office, was called "teothing-man," now "tithing-man." Brown. TITHING-MAN. In Saxon law. This was the name of the head or chief of a decennary. In modern English law, he is the same as an under-constable or peace officer. In modern law. A constable. "After the introduction of justices of the peace, the offices of constable and tithing-man became so similar that we now regard them as pre cisely the same." Willc. Const. Introd. In New England. A parish officer an nually elected to preserve good order in the church during divine service, and to make complaint of any disorderly conduct. Web ster. TITHING-PENNY. In Saxon and old English law. Money paid to the sheriff by the several tithings of his county. Cowell. TITIUS. In Roman law. A proper name, frequently used in designating an in definite or fictitious person, or a person re ferred to by way of illustration. "Titius" and "Seius," in this use, correspond to
"John Doe" and "Richard Roe," or to "A. B "and M C. D." TITLE. The radical meaning of this word appears to be that of a mark, style, or designation; a distinctive appellation; the name by which anything is known. Thus, in the law of persons, a title is an appella tion of dignity or distinction, a name denot ing the social rank of the person bearing it; as "duke" or "count." So, in legislation, the title of a statute is the heading or pre liminary part, furnishing the name by which the act is individually known. It is usually prefixed to the statute in the form of a brief summary of its contents; as "An act forth© prevention of gaming." Again, the title of a patent is the short description of the in vention, which is copied in the letters patent from the inventor's petition; e. g., "a new and improved method of drying and prepar ing malt." Johns. Pat. Man. 90. In the law of trade-marks, a title may be come a subject of property; as one who has adopted a particular title for a newspaper, or other business enterprise, may, by long and prior user, or by compliance with statutory provisions as to registration and notice, ac quire a right to be protected in the exclusive use of it. Abbott. The title of a book, or any literary compo sition, is its name; that is, the heading or caption prefixed to it, and disclosing the dis tinctive appellation by which it is to be known. This usually comprises a brief de scription of its subject-matter and the name of its author. "Title" is also used as the name of one of the subdivisions employed in many literary works, standing intermediate between the di visions denoted by the term "books" or "parts," and those designated as "chapters" and "sections." In real property law. Title is the means whereby the owner of lands has the just possession of his property. Co. Iitt. 345; 2 Bl. Comm. 195. Title is the means whereby a person's right to property is established. Code Ga. 1882, § 2348. Title may be defined generally to be the evidence of right which a person has to the possession of property. The word "title" certainly does not merely signify the right which a person has to the possession of property; because there are many instances in which a person may have the right to the possession of property, and at the same time have no title to the same. In its ordi nary legal acceptation, however, it generally seems to imply a right of possession also. It therefore appears, on the whole, to signify the outward evi
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