Blacks Law Dict. 1st ed

EXTRAPAROCHIAL

EZARDAR

467

EXTUMU. In old records. Relies. Cowell. EXUERE PATRIAM. To throw off or renounce one's country or native allegiance; to expatriate one's self. Phillim. Dom. 18. EXULARE. In old English law. To exile or banish. Nullus liber homo, ecculetur, nisi, etc., no freeman shall be exiled, unless* etc Magna Charta, c. 29; 2 Inst. 47. EXUPERARE. To overcome; to appre hend or take. Leg. Edm. c. 2. EY. A watery place; water. Co. Litt. 6. EYDE. Aid; assistance; relief. A sub sidy. EYE-WITNESS. One who saw the act, fact, or transaction to which he testifies. Distinguished from an ear-witness, (auritus.) EYOTT. A small island arising in a river. Fleta, 1. 3, c 2, ยง b; Bract. 1. 2, c. 2. EYRE. Justices in eyre were j udges com missioned in Anglo-Norman times in England to travel systematically through the kingdom, once in seven years, holding courts in speci fied places for the trial of certain descriptions of causes. EYRER. L. Fr. To travel or journey; to go about or itinerate. Britt. c. 2. EZARDAR. In Hindu law. A farmer or renter of land in the districts of Hindoo stan.

EXTRAPAROCHIAL. Out of a parish; not within the bounds or limits of any parish. 1 Bl. Comm. 113, 284. EXTRAVAGANTES. In canon law. Those decretal epistles which were published after the Clementines. They were so called because at first they were not digested or ar ranged with the other papal constitutions, but seemed to be, as It were, detached from the canon law. They continued to be called by the same name when they were after wards inserted in the body of the canon law. The first extravagantes are those of Pope John XXII., successor of Clement V. The last collection was brought down to the year 1483, and was called the "Common Extrav agantes," notwithstanding that they were likewise incorporated with the rest of the canon law. Enc. Lond. EXTREME HAZARD. To constitute extreme hazard, the situation of a vessel must be such that there is imminent danger of her being lost, notwithstanding all the means that can be applied to get her off. 1 Conn. 421. EXTREMIS. When a person is sick be yond the hope of recovery, and near death, he is said to be in extremis. Extremis probatis, preesumuntur media. Extremes being proved, intermedi ate things are presumed. Tray. Lat. Max. 207. EXTRINSIC. Foreign; from outside sources; dehora.

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