Note: Stare-Decisis also applies to the Definitions of Words and not solely to Case-Law.
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DRIVER: One employed in conducting a coach, carriage, wagon, or other vehicle, with horses, mules, or other animals, or a bicycle, tricycle, or motor car, though not a street railroad car. See Davis vs. Petrinovich, 112 Ala. 654, 21 South. 344, 36 L. R. A. 615; Gen. St. Conn. 1902, § 2038; Isaacs v. Railroad Co., 47 N. Y. 122, 7 Am. Rep. 418.
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STARE DECISIS. Lat. To stand by decided cases; to uphold precedents; to maintain former adjudications. 1 Kent, Comm. 477.
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EMPLOYED. This signifies both the act of doing a thing and the being under contract or orders to do it. U. S. v. Morris, 14 Pet. 475, 10 L. Ed. 543; U. S. v. The Catharine, 2 Paine, 721, Fed. Cas. No. 14, 755.
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EMPLOY. To engage in one's service; to use as an agent or substitute in transacting business; to commission and intrust with the management of one's affairs; and, when used in respect to a servant or hired laborer, the term is equivalent to hiring, which implies a request and a contract for a compensation, and has but this one meaning when used in the ordinary affairs and business of life. McCluskey v. Cromwell, 11 N. Y. 605; Murray v. Walker, 83 Iowa 202, 48, N. W. 1075; Malloy v. Board of Education, 102 Cal. 642, 36 Pac. 948; Gurney v. Railroad Co., 58 N. Y. 371.
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Definition of «DRIVER» quoted from Page 398, Black's Law Dictionary, Second Edition 1910.
Definition of «STARE DECISIS» quoted from p. 1105, Black's Law Dictionary, 2nd Ed. 1910.
Definitions of «EMPLOYED» and «EMPLOY» from Page 421, Black's Law Dic., 2nd Ed. 1910.
Do you people know what «Euphemism» and «Double-Speak» mean...? Well... DO ya!? O_O
Time-Stamp: 030TL04m19d/09h37Z