Lat. An intention of stealing.
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FURCA
In old English law . A fork. A gallows or gibbet. Bract fol. 56.
FURIGELDUM
A fine or mulct paid for theft.Furiosi nulla voluntas est. A madman has no will. Dig. 50, 17, 40; Broom, Max. 314.
FURIOSITY
In Scotch law. Madness, as distinguished from fatuity or idiocy.
FURIOSUS
Lat. An insane man; a madman; a lunatic.Furiosus absentia loco est. A madman is the same with an absent person, [that Is,his presence Is of no effect.] Dig. 50, 17, […]
FURLINGUS
A furlong, or a furrow one-eighth part of a mile long. Co. Litt. 5&.
FURLONG
A measure of length, being forty poles, or one-eighth of a mile.
FURLOUGH
Leave of absence ; especially. leave given to a military or naval officer,or soldier or seaman, to be absent from service for a certain time. Also the documentgranting leave of […]
FURNAGE
See FORNAGIUM ; FOUR.
FURNISH
To supply; provide; provide for use. Delp v. Brewing Co., 123 Pa. 42, 15Atl. 871; Wyatt v. Larimer & “W. Irr. Co., 1 Colo. App. 480. 29 Pac. 906. As […]
FURNITURE
This term includes that which furnishes, or with which anything is furnished or supplied; whatever must be supplied to a house, a room, or the like, to make it habitable, […]
FURNIVAL’S INN
Formerly an inn of chancery. See INNS OF CHANCERY .Furor contrahi matrimonium non sinit, quia consensu opus est. Insanityprevents marriage from being contracted, because consent is needed. Dig. 23, 2, […]
FURST AND FONDUNG
In old English law . Time to advise or take counsel, Jacob.FURTHER. In most of its uses in law, this term means additional, though occassionallyit may mean any. future, or […]
FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS
These are the additional instructions that are given to the jury by a judge after they have begun deliberating a case.
FURTHERANCE
In criminal law , furthering, helping forward, promotion, or advancementof a criminal project or conspiracy. Powers v. Comm., 114 Ky. 237, 70 S. W. 652.
FURTHEST MONTH
An EXCHANGETRADED DERIVATIVE contract with the longest maturity date featuring trading volume ; contracts with even longer maturity dates that are inactive or dormant are not considered to be the […]
FURTIVE
In old English law . Stealthily ; by stealth. Fleta, lib. 1, c. 38,
FURTUM
Lat. Theft. The fraudulent appropriation to one’s self of the property ofanother, with an intention to commit theft without the consent of the owner. Fleta, 1. 1,c. 36; Bract, fol. […]
FUSTIGATIO
In old English law . A beating with sticks or clubs; one of the ancientkinds of punishment of malefactors. Bract fol. 1046, lib. 3. tr. 1, c. 6.
FUSTIS
In old English law . A staff, used in making livery of seisin. Bract fol. 40. A baton, club, or cudgel.
FUTURE
An EXCHANGETRADED DERIVATIVE contract that permits the purchaser to buy, and the seller to sell, an ASSET at a predetermined future price and delivery date . Standardized futures contracts are […]
FUTURE ADVANCES CLAUSE
An agreement within a mortgage allowing a borrower to get more money and increase a mortgage principal without redoing all existing paperwork on the existing mortgage. P
FUTURE BACKWARD
Scheduling technique where a specific project completion date, possibly years in the future, must be met. From that future date back to current time, the steps and the durations needed […]
FUTURE DEBT
In Scotch law. A debt which is created, but which will not becomedue till a future day. 1 Bell, Comm. 315.
FUTURE EARNINGS
This term is applied to the earnings an injured would have made if he had not have been injured.