KFLCC Kingdom Law 2nd Ed.

ITA TE DEUS ADJUVET

659

IULE

be always such that the disposition may pre vail. ITA TE DEUS ADJUVET. Lat So help you God. The old form of administer ing an oath in England, generally in connec tion with other words, thus: Ita te Deus adjuvet, et saorosancta Dei Evangelia, So help you God, and God's holy Evangelists. Ita te Deus adjuvet et omnes sancti, So help you God and all the saints. Willes, 338. Ita utere tuo -at aliexmm son lsedas. Use your own property and your own rights in such a way that you will not hurt your neighbor, or prevent him from enjoying his. Frequently written, "Sic utere tuo," etc., (9. v.) ITEM. Also; likewise; again. This word was formerly used to mark the beginning of a new paragraph or division after the first, whence is derived the common application of it to denote a separate or distinct particular of an account or bill. See Horwitz v. Nor ris, 60 Pa. 282; Baldwin v. Morgan, 73 Miss. 276, 18 South. 919. The word is sometimes used as a verb. "The whole {costs] in this case that was thus itemed to counsel." Bunb. p. 164, case 233. ITER. Lat In the civil law. A way; a right of way belonging as a servitude to an estate in the country, (prwdium rusticum.) The right of way was of three kinds: (1) iter, a right to walk, or ride on horseback, or in a litter; <2) actus, a right to drive a beast or vehicle; (3) via, a full right of way, comprising right to walk or ride, or drive beast or carriage. Heinec. § 408. Or, as some think, they were distinguished by the width of the objects which could be rightfully carried over the way; e. g., via, 8 feet; act

us, 4 feet, etc. Mackeld. Rom. Law, § 290; Bract, fol. 232; 4 Bell, H. L. Sc. 390. In old English law. A journey, espe cially a circuit made by a justice in eyre, or itinerant justice, to try causes according to his own mission. Du Cange; Bract lib. 3, cc. 11, 12, 13. In maritime law. A way or route. The route or direction of a voyage; the route or way that is taken to make the voyage assur ed. Distinguished from the voyage itself. Iter est jus enndi, ambnlandi hominis; non etiam jnmentum agendi vel vehien- ' lnm. A way is the right of going or walk ing, and does not include the right of driving a beast of burden or a carriage. Co. Litt. 56a; Inst. 2, 3, pr.; Mackeld. Rom. Law, §318. Lat. Repetition. In the Roman law, a bonitary owner might liberate a slave, and the quiritary owner's repetition (iteratio) of the process effected a complete manumission. Brown. ITINERANT. Wandering; traveling; ap plied to justices who make circuits. Also applied in various statutory and municipal laws (in the sense of traveling from place to place) to certain classes of merchants, traders, and salesmen. See Shiff v. State, 84 Ala. 454, 4 South. 419; Twining v. Elgin, 38 111. App. 357; Rev. Laws Mass. 1902, p. 595, c. 65, § 1; West v. Mt Sterling (Ky.) 65 S. W. 122 ITERATIO. ITINERA. Eng. Law, 52. Eyres, or circuits. 1 Reeve,

TITLE. In old English law.

Christmas.

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