¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Triors
1. trior [n] - See also: trior
Lexicographical Neighbors of Triors
Literary usage of Triors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A General Abridgment of Law and Equity: Alphabetically Digested Under Proper by Charles Viner (1793)
"... be the triors of the Challenges of the Tales. SP Br. [i. ... triors of the
principal pannel, if they affirm the principal ы 8™cites pannel, ..."
2. American State Trials: A Collection of the Important and Interesting by John Davison Lawson, Robert Lorenzo Howard (1915)
"If the gentleman elects to proceed under the common law, triors must be appointed,
which had never been the practice in this state, though I am not prepared ..."
3. American State Trials: A Collection of the Important and Interesting by John Davison Lawson, Robert Lorenzo Howard (1915)
"If the gentleman elects to proceed under the common law, triors must be appointed,
which had never been the practice in this state, though I am not prepared ..."
4. The Practice at Law, in Equity, and in Special Proceedings in All the Courts by William Wait (1874)
"Trial of challenge. rule, a principal challenge to the polls is triable by the
court, while a challenge to the favor is triable by triors. ..."
5. A Treatise on the Law of Trials in Actions Civil and Criminal by Seymour Dwight Thompson, Marion C. Early (1912)
"When one juror had been procured, he, with the two triors who had passed upon
his qualifications, or with any other two unexceptionable persons selected by ..."
6. The Trial of William Freeman for the Murder of John G. Van Nest: Including by William Freeman, Amariah Brigham, New York (State). Supreme Court (1848)
"The court charged the triors in the case of the juror Taylor, among other things,
that the resort to the triors by the prisoner's counsel was in the nature ..."
7. A Law Dictionary, Adapted to the Constitution: And Laws of the United States by John Bouvier (1874)
"triors. In Practice. Persons appointed according to law to try whether a person
challenged to the favor ¡R or is not qualified to ..."