(adj.) Pertaining to an office; invested with the character of an officer; proceeding from, sanctioned by, or done by, an officer. Demi-official. Partly official or authorized. Having color of official right-Official act.
One done by an officer in his official capacity under color and by virtue of his office. Turner v. Sisson, 137 Mass. 192; Lam mon v. Feusire, 111 U. S. 17, 4 Sup. Ct. 286, 28 L. Ed. 337. Official assignee. In English practice. An assignee in bankruptcy appointed by the lord chancellor to cooperate with the other assignees in administering a bankrupt’s estate. Official managers. Persons formerly appointed, under English statutes now repealed, to superintend the winding up of insolvent companies under the control of the court of chancery. Wharton. Official misconduct. Any unlawful be; havior bv a public officer in relation to the duties of his office, willful in its character, including any willful or corrupt failure, refusal, or neglect of an officer to perform any duty enjoined on him by law. Watson v. State. 9 Tex. App. 212; Brackenridge v. State, 27 Tex, Antf. 513, 11 S. W. 630, 4 L. R. A. 360. Official principal. An ecclesiastical officer whose duty is to hear causes between party and party as the delegate of the bishop or archbishop by whom he is appointed. He generally also holds the office of vicar general and (if appointed by a bishop) that of chancellor. The official principal of the province of Canterbury is called the “dean of arches.” Phillim. Ecc. Law. 1203. ei seq.; Sweet. Official solicitor to the court of chancery. An officer in England whose functions are to protect the suitors fund, and to administer, under the direction of the court, so much of it as now comes under the spending power of the court. He acts for persons suing or defending in forma pauperis, when so directed by the judge, and for those who. through ignorance or forgetfulness, have been guilty of contempt of court by not obeying process. He also acts generally as solicitor in all cases in which the chancery division requires such services. The office is transferred to the high court by the judicature acts, but no alteration in its name appears to have been made. Sweet-Official trustee of charity lands. The secretary of the English charity commissioners. He is a corporation sole for the purpose of taking and holding real property and leasefiblds upon trust for an endowed charity in cases where it appears to the court desirable to vest them in him. He is a bare trustee, the possession and management of the land remaining in the persons acting in the administration of the charity. Sweet. As to official “Bonds,” “Liquidator,” “Log-Book,” “Newspaper,” “Oath,” and “Use,” see those titles.