Entity Extraction Results
Agent (Black's Law Dictionary, 1st ed.)
Entity Statistics
294
Total Entities14
Entity TypesspaCy NER
MethodEntity Breakdown by Type
PERSON
75
AGEll'l'llm A. Sax
Spelman
Saxon
Inn
AGEXB
Capwell
Cap
lib
R. I. 101
Antonio v
Miller
7 N. M. 289
AGElf T. One
L. Fr
c. 37
+60 more
ORDINAL
2
1ng
first
DATE
13
twenty-one years
1005
Dec. 00
1287
1046
98 U. S. 2G4
1866
c. 49
1088
45 8
Dec. 716
Cod. 9, 38
99'l
CARDINAL
134
259
21
41
8
84
21
11
1 Wm
10
17
9
706
19
822
3
+119 more
TIME
1
three nights
ORG
40
Montoya de 4
g p e lo tt y 6
Infant
AGENCY
Story, Ag
Butler v. Maples
Implied
Spri
Engine Co.
Cial
authoris•
Coolei v. Perrine
State
58 Rep
Sternaman v. Iusuran...
+25 more
PRODUCT
6
St. 11 Geo
7 Ind. App
Bryant v. Moore
Co.
Fos 1 BJ
CS Coke
GPE
14
Ky.
Ala. 346
Tumer
JJpeala
peraona
Indicating
Mod
St.
Wis.
AGGRESBOR
United States
St. 359
Mass.
Macklin
LOC
2
South
South
MONEY
3
625
700
749
NORP
1
Impotentta
WORK_OF_ART
1
Impotence
PERCENT
1
2 v. Orleans Ootton ...
QUANTITY
1
24 R. I. 179
Text with Entity Highlights
PERSON
(75)
ORDINAL
(2)
DATE
(13)
CARDINAL
(134)
TIME
(1)
ORG
(40)
PRODUCT
(6)
GPE
(14)
LOC
(2)
MONEY
(3)
NORP
(1)
WORK_OF_ART
(1)
PERCENT
(1)
QUANTITY
(1)
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. .
AGEll'l'llm A. Sax
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing.
Spelman
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In
Saxon
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an
Inn
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,
1ng
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I
259
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259.
three nights
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par
AGEXB
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See
Capwell
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v.
Cap
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta,
lib
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well,
21
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21
R. I. 101
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101,
41
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl.
1005
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005:
Montoya de 4
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I
8
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v,
Miller
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller,
7 N. M. 289
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289,
84
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40,
21
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln.
L. Fr
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n
11
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m
g p e lo tt y 6
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an
Infant
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished.
St. 11 Geo
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.;
1 Wm
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I
10
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil.
Reg
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all
good1
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See
Story, Ag
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I
17
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples,
9
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall.
706
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706,
19
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19
L. Ed
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed.
822
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or
Implied
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where
Jaquea v. Todd
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd,
3
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (
N. Y.
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00;
Spri
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by
one
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field
Engine Co.
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]',
7 Ind. App
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App.
502
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84
N. E. 866
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v.
Smith
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith.
41
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind.
297
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer
Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck,
109
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109
Ky.
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky.
285
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781,
61
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e
Cial
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le
one
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or
authoris•
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act.
Bryant v. Moore
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under
26
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me.
87
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87,
46
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am.
Dec. 00
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00:
Gibson
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co.,
94
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94
Ala. 346
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346,
10
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10
South
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South.
304
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him
Coolei v. Perrine
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine,
41
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41
N. J. Law
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law,
325
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325,
32
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. •
State
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard,
58 Rep
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan.
797
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797,
61
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac.
290
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290,
39
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or
mel
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co.
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co.,
170
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of
two
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318,
88
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors,
(q. 11
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep.
625
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625;
Wynegar v. State
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State,
157
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind.
577
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~
1
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it•
11ynonyms
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm.
Prln. & Ag
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag.
2
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master.
Tumer
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v.
Cro BB
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB,
83
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which
one
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218,
18
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578,
16
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v.
Treadwell
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell,
69
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal.
226
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226,
10
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac.
502
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag.
1
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between
two
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which
one
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the
represent•
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who
111
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of
one
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
AGENT
AGE. Signifies thoee periods In the lives Incapacity for reproduction, eating In ei
of persons of both sexes which enable them ther ses:, and whether arising from struc
to do certain acts which, before they bad tural or other e&Utle8.
arrived at those periods, they were prohibit·
ed from doing. . AGEll'l'llm A. Sax. The true master
The length of time during which a per or owner of a thing. Spelman.
son has lived or a thing has existed.
In the old books, "age" ls commouly used AGE.NHI.N.a.. In Saxon law. A guest
to signify "foll age;" that le, the age of at an Inn, who, ha ,1ng stayed there for
twenty-one years. Litt. I 259. three nights, was then accounted one of the
-Le JPll age. The age at which the person family. Oowell.
acquires full capacity to make his own con
tracts and deeds and transact business general•
ly (age of majority) or to enter into some par AGEXB. Lat. An agent, a conductor.
ticular contract or relation, u, the "legal age or manager of atralrs. Dlstlngulsbed from
of consent" to marriage. See Capwell v. Cap factor, a workman. A plalutltr. Fleta, lib.
well, 21 R. I. 101, 41 Atl. 1005: Montoya de 4, c. 15, I 8.
Antonio v, Miller, 7 N. M. 289, 84 Pac. 40, 21
L.R. A.699. '
AGElf T. One who represents and acts
AGE, Awe, Aln. L. Fr. Water. Kel• for another under the contract or relation
ham. of agency, q. t1.
AGE PBAYEB. A suggestion of DOD• 1p m eci - o . l u . .o A a t g l e o n a er . a l A a ge i n e t n 11 t a is r e o e n i e th e e r m g p e lo tt y 6 e " d 0 l o in r
age, made by an Infant party to a real ac his capacity as a profesalonal man or master
Uon, with a prayer that the proceedings of an art or trade, or one to whom the principal
may be deferred until his full age. It ls confides hie whole bnainesa or all transactions
or functions of a desi,tnated class ; or be ls a
now abolished. St. 11 Geo. IY.; 1 Wm. IV. person who la authorized b:, hia principal to
c. 37, I 10; 1 Lil. Reg. M; S Bl Comm. 800. execute all deeds, sign all contracts, or pur
chase all good1, required in a J:)llrticular trade,
AGENCY A relation, created either by business, or employment. See Story, Ag. I 17;
Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 706, 19 L. Ed. 822;
express or Implied contract or by law, where Jaquea v. Todd, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 00; Spri~g
by one party (called the principal or con• field Engine Co. v. Kenned]', 7 Ind. App. 502,
stltuent) delegates the transaction of some 84 N. E. 866;_ .Cruzan v. Smith. 41 Ind. 297;
lawful business or the authority to do cer Godshaw v. .-:Jtruck, 109 Ky. 285, 58 S. W.
781, 61 L. R. A. 668. A BJ)e Cial agent le one
tain acts for him or In relation to his rights
employed to conduct a -particular transaction or
or property, with more or less discretionary piece of business for hi• principal or authoris•
power, to another person (called the agent, ed to perform a 11peclfied act. Bryant v. Moore,
attorney, proxy, or delegate) who under 26 Me. 87, 46 Am. Dec. 00: Gibson v. Snow
Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346, 10 South. 304:
takes to manage the affair and render him Coolei v. Perrine, 41 N. J. Law, 325, 32 Am.
an account thereof. • State v. Hubbard, 58 Rep, -10.
Kan. 797, 61 Pac. 290, 39 L. R. A. 860; Agents employed for the aale of goods or mel'
chandlse are called "mercantile agents," and
Sternaman v. Iusurance Co., 170 N. Y. 13,
are of two principal claeses.-brokere and fac
62 N. E. 763, 57 L. R. A. 318, 88 Am. St. tors, (q. 11.;) a factor is sometimes called a
Rep. 625; Wynegar v. State, 157 Ind. 577, "commission agent," or "commission merchant."
62 N. E. 38. Ruu. Mere. ~~ 1.
8:,aoa:,ma. The term "agent" la to be
The contract of agency may be defined to be distinguished from it• 11ynonyms "servant,"
acontract by which one of the contracting par- "representative," and "tru11tee." A servant acts
ties confides the management of some affair, to In behalf of hi, master and under the latter's
be transacted on his account, to the other par direction and authority, but is re,tarded as a
ty, who undertakes to do the business and renmere instrument, and not as the substitute or
der an account of it. 1 Liverm. Prln. & Ag. 2. proxy of the master. Tumer v. Cro BB, 83 Tex.
A contract by which one person, with greater
218, 18 S. W. 578, 16 L. R. A. 262; People
or lees discretionary power, undertakes to rep
resent an.other In certain business relations. v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226, 10 Pac. 502. A
representative (such as an executor or an as•
Whart. Ag. 1.
algnee in bankruptcy) owe11 his power and au
A relation between two or more persons, by
thority to the law. whkb puts him In the place
which one party, usually called the agent or
of the person represented, although the latter
attomey. is authorized to do certain acts for, or
may have designated or chosen the represent•·
in relation to the rights or property of the
other, who 111 denominated the principal, con- tlve. A trustee acta in the interest and for the
stituent, or employer. Bouvier. benefit of one person, but by an authority de
rived from a
All Extracted Entities
| Entity | Type | Position | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| AGEll'l'llm A. Sax | PERSON | 304-322 | 85% |
| Spelman | PERSON | 399-406 | 85% |
| Saxon | PERSON | 504-509 | 85% |
| Inn | PERSON | 572-575 | 85% |
| 1ng | ORDINAL | 586-589 | 85% |
| twenty-one years | DATE | 607-623 | 85% |
| 259 | CARDINAL | 633-636 | 85% |
| three nights | TIME | 638-650 | 85% |
| AGEXB | PERSON | 878-883 | 85% |
| Capwell | PERSON | 1032-1039 | 85% |
| Cap | PERSON | 1043-1046 | 85% |
| lib | PERSON | 1086-1089 | 85% |
| 21 | CARDINAL | 1097-1099 | 85% |
| R. I. 101 | PERSON | 1100-1109 | 85% |
| 41 | CARDINAL | 1111-1113 | 85% |
| 1005 | DATE | 1119-1123 | 85% |
| Montoya de 4 | ORG | 1125-1137 | 85% |
| 8 | CARDINAL | 1148-1149 | 85% |
| Antonio v | PERSON | 1151-1160 | 85% |
| Miller | PERSON | 1162-1168 | 85% |
| 7 N. M. 289 | PERSON | 1170-1181 | 85% |
| 84 | CARDINAL | 1183-1185 | 85% |
| 21 | CARDINAL | 1195-1197 | 85% |
| AGElf T. One | PERSON | 1212-1224 | 85% |
| L. Fr | PERSON | 1264-1269 | 85% |
| 11 | CARDINAL | 1450-1452 | 85% |
| g p e lo tt y 6 | ORG | 1485-1500 | 85% |
| Infant | ORG | 1534-1540 | 85% |
| St. 11 Geo | PRODUCT | 1848-1858 | 85% |
| 1 Wm | CARDINAL | 1865-1869 | 85% |
| c. 37 | PERSON | 1921-1926 | 85% |
| 10 | CARDINAL | 1930-1932 | 85% |
| Reg | PERSON | 1941-1944 | 85% |
| good1 | PERSON | 2021-2026 | 85% |
| AGENCY | ORG | 2063-2069 | 85% |
| Story, Ag | ORG | 2129-2138 | 85% |
| 17 | CARDINAL | 2142-2144 | 85% |
| Butler v. Maples | ORG | 2146-2162 | 85% |
| 9 | CARDINAL | 2164-2165 | 85% |
| 706 | CARDINAL | 2172-2175 | 85% |
| 19 | CARDINAL | 2177-2179 | 85% |
| L. Ed | PERSON | 2180-2185 | 85% |
| 822 | CARDINAL | 2187-2190 | 85% |
| Implied | ORG | 2203-2210 | 85% |
| Jaquea v. Todd | PERSON | 2237-2251 | 85% |
| 3 | CARDINAL | 2253-2254 | 85% |
| N. Y. | PERSON | 2262-2267 | 85% |
| Spri | ORG | 2273-2277 | 85% |
| one | CARDINAL | 2283-2286 | 85% |
| Engine Co. | ORG | 2329-2339 | 85% |
Showing first 50 of 294 entities
Processing History
Single extraction run