This phrase is synonymous with ” due process of law .” or “the law of the land .” and the general definition thereof is “lawin its regular course of administration through courts of justice;” and. while not alwaysnecessarily confined to judicial proceedings , yet these words have such a signification ,when used to designate the kind of an eviction, or ouster, from real estate by which aparty is dispossessed, as to preclude thereunder proof of a constructive evictionresulting from the purchase of a paramount title when hostilely asserted bv the partyholding it. See Adler v. Whitbeck. 44 Ohio St. 509, 9 N. E. 072: In re Dorsev. 7 Port.(Ala.) 404: Backus v. Shinherd. 11 Wend. (N. Y.) 035; Dwight v. Williams. 8 Fed. Cas. 187
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