KFLCC Kingdom Law 2nd Ed.
648
INTERIM
INTERNAL
Queen v. Babcock, 41 Barb. (N. T.) 339; In re Shinn's Estate, 166 Pa. 121, 30 Atl. 1026, 45 Am. St. Rep. 656. Not a technical legal term, but sometimes used with refer ence to the acts of an executor de son tort or a negotiorum gestor in the civil law. INTERMEDIARY. In modern civil law. A broker; one who is employed to negotiate a matter between two parties, and who for that reason is considered as the mandatary (agent) of both. Civ. Code La. 1900, art 301& Intervening; inter posed during the progress of a suit, pro ceeding, business, etc., or between its be ginning and end. —Intermediate account. In probate law. An account of an executor, administrator, or guardian filed subsequent to his first or initial account and before his final account. Specifical ly in New York, an account filed with the sur rogate for the purpose of disclosing the acts of the person accounting and the state or condi tion of the fund in his hands, and not made the subject of a judicial settlement. Code Civ. Proc. N. Y. 1899, § 2514, subd. 9.—Interme diate order. In code practice. An order made between the commencement of an action and the entry of a final judgment, or, in criminal law, between the finding of the indictment and the completion of the judgment roll. People v. Pri ori, 163 N. Y. 99, 57 N. E. 85; Boyce v. Wa bash Ry. Co., 63 Iowa, 70, 18 N. W. 673, 50 Am. Rep. 730; State v. O'Brien, 18 Mont. 1, 43 Pac. 1091; Hymes v. Van Cleef, 61 Hun, 618, 15 N. Y. Supp. 341.—Intermediate toll. Toll for travel on a toll road, paid or to be collected from persons who pass thereon at points between the toll gates, such persons not passing by, through, or around the toll gates. Hollingworth v. State, 29 Ohio St. 552. INTERMEDIATE. INTERMIXTURE OF GOODS. Con fusion of goods; the confusing or mingling together of goods belonging to different own ers in such a way that the property of neither owner can be separately identified or extracted from the mass. See Smith v. Sanborn, 6 Gray (Mass.) 134. And see CON FUSION OP GOODS. INTERN. To restrict or shut up a pei son, as a political prisoner, within a limited territory. Relating to the interior } comprised within boundary lines; of interior concern or interest; domestic, as opposed to foreign. —Internal commerce. See COMMERCE.—In ternal improvements. With reference to gov ernmental policy and constitutional provi sions restricting taxation or the contracting of public debts, this term means works of general public utility or advantage, designed to promote facility of intercommunication, trade, and com merce, the transportation of persons and prop erty, or the development of the natural resources of the state, such as railroads, public highways, turnpikes, and canals, bridges, the improvement INTERNAL. INTERMITTENT EASEMENT. See EASEMENT.
made in the mean time, and until something is •done.—Interim receipt. A receipt for money paid by way of premium for a contract of in surance for which application is made. If the risk is rejected, the money is refunded, less the /pro rata premium. In old practice. To link together, or interchangeably. Writs were called "interlagueata" where several were issued against several parties residing In different counties, each party being sum moned by a separate writ to warrant the ten ant, together with the other warrantors. Fleta, lib. 5, c. 4, § 2. The act of writ ing between the lines of an instrument; also what is written between lines. Morris v. Vanderen, 1 Dall. 67, 1 L. Ed. 38; Russell v. Eubanks, 84 Mo. 88. In Scotch practice. An order or decree of court; an order made in open court. 2 Swint. 362; Arkley, 32. —Interlocutor of relevancy. In Scotch practice. A decree as to the relevancy of a libel or indictment in a criminal case. 2 Alis. Grim. Pr. 37a Provisional; tem porary; not final. Something intervening between the commencement and the end of a suit which decides some point or matter, but is not a final decision of the whole contro versy. Mora v. Sun Mut. Ins. Co., 13 Abb. Prac. (N. Y.) 310. As to interlocutory "Costs," "Decree," "Judgment," "Order," and "Sentence," see those titles. INTERLOPERS. Persons who run into business to which they have no right, or who interfere wrongfully; persons who enter a country or place to trade without license. Webster. In the popular sense, this term denotes the contracting of a marriage relation between two persons considered as members of different nations, tribes, families, etc., as, between the sov ereigns of two different countries, between «.n American and an alien, between Indians of different tribes, between the scions of •different clans or families. But, in law, it is sometimes used (and with propriety) to emphasize the mutuality of the marriage contract and as importing a reciprocal en gagement by which each of the parties "mar ries" the other. Thus, in a pleading, instead of averring that "the plaintiff was married to the defendant," it would* be proper to al lege that "the parties intermarried" at such a time and place. with property or the conduct of business affairs officiously or without right or title. Mc INTERLAQUEARE. INTERLINEATION. INTERLOCUTOR. INTERLOCUTORY. INTERMARRIAGE. INTERMEDDLE. To interfere
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