The Cyclopedic Dictionary of Law : Comprising the Terms And Phrases of American Jurisprudence, Including Ancient And Modern Common Law, International Law, the French And the Spanish Law, Etc., Etc., With An Exhaustive Collection of Legal Maxims
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LIBERTI, or LIBERTINI. lu Roman law. The condition of those who, having been slaves, had been made free. 1 Brown, Civ. Law, 99. There is some distinction between these words. By libertus was understood the freed- man when considered in relation to his pa- tron, who had bestowed liberty upon him; and he was called libertinus when considered in relation to the state he occupied in so- ciety subsequent to his manumission. Lee. Dr. Civ. § 93. LIBERTICIDE. A destroyer of liberty. LIBERTIES. Privileg...ed districts exempt from the sheriff's jurisdiction. LIBERTINUM INGRATUM LEGES CIV- iles In pristinam servitutem redigunt; sed leges Angliae seme! manumissum semper liberum judicant. The civil laws reduce an ungrateful freedman to his original slavery; but the laws of England regard a man once manumitted as ever after free. Co. Litt. 137. LIBERTY (Lat. lihei; free; Hheitaa. free- dom, liberty). Freedom from restraint; the faculty of willing, and the power of doing what has been willed, without influence from without.
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