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Home » Law Dictionary » F » FORFEITURE

FORFEITURE

TheLaw.com Law Dictionary & Black's Law Dictionary 2nd Ed.

(A) When property or a privilege or right is lost as a result of a violation of law, for example, the loss of a driver’s license after committing excessive moving violations. (B) punishment, torts. Forfeiture is a punishment annexed by law to some illegal act, or negligence, in the owner of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, whereby he loses all his interest therein, and they become vested in the party injured, as a recompense for the wrong which he alone, or the Public together with himself, hath sustained. 2 Bl. Com. 267. 2. Lands, tenements and hereditaments, may be forfeited by various means: 1. By the commission of crimes and misdemeanors. 2. By alienation contrary to law. 3. By the non-performance of conditions. 4. By waste.

Law Dictionary – Alternative Legal Definition

1. A punishment annexed by law to some Illegal act or negligence in the owner of lands; tenements, or hereditaments, whereby he loses all his interest therein, and they go to the party injured aa a recr ompense for the wrong which he alone, or the public together with himself, hath sustained. 2 Bl. Comm. 267. Wiseman v. Mcnulty, 25 Cal. 237. 2. The loss of land by a tenant to his lord, as the consequence of some breach of fidelity. 1 Steph. Comm. 166. 3. The loss of lands and goods to the state, as the consequence of crime. 4 BL Comm. 381, 387 ; 4 Steph. Comm. 447, 452 ; 2 Kent Comm. 385; 4 Kent Comm. 420. Avery vF Everett 110 N. Y. 317, 18 N. E. 148, 1 L. R. A. 204, 6 Am. St Rep. 368.” 4. The loss of goods or chattels, as a punishment for some crime or misdemeanor in the party forfeiting, aud as a compensation for the offense and injury committed against him to whom they are forfeited. 2 Bl. Comm. 420. It should be noted that “forfeiture” is not an identical or convertible term with “confiscation.” The latter is the consequence of the former. Forfeiture is the result which the law attaches as an immediate and necessary consequence to the illegal acts of the individual; but confiscation implies the action of the state; and property, although it may be forfeited, cannot be said to be confiscated until the government has formally claimed or taken possession of it 5. The loss of office by abuser, non-user, or refusal to exercis it 6. The loss of a corporate franchise or charter in consequence of some illegal act or of malfeasance or non-feasance. 7. The loss of the right to life, as the consequence of the commission of some crime to which the law has affixed a capital penalty. 8. The incurring a liability to pay a definite sum of money as the consequence of violating the provisions of some statute, or refusal to comply with some requirement of law. State v. Marion County Com’rs, 85 Jml 493. 9. A thing or sum of money forfeited. Something imposed as a punishment for an offense or delinquency. The word in this sense is frequently associated with the word “penalty.” Van Buren v. Digges, 11 How. 477, 13 L. Ed. 771. 10. In mining law, the loss of a mining claim held by location on the public domain (unpatented) in consequence of the failure of the holder to make the required annual expenditure upon It within the time allowed. McKay v. McDougall, 25 Mont. 258, 64 Pac.609. 87 Am. St. Rep. 395; St. John v. Kidd, 26 Cal. 271. Forfeiture of a bond. A failure to perform the condition on which the obligor was to be excused from the penalty in the bond. Forfeiture of marriage. A penalty incurred by a ward in chivalry who married without the consent or against the will of the guardians. See DUPLEX VALOR M A BIT AG IT. Forfeiture of silk, supposed to lie in the docks, used, in times when its importation was prohibited, to be proclaimed each term in the exchequer. Forfeitures abolition act. Another name for the felony act of 1870, abolishing forfeitures for felony in England.

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