sequestration

sequestration
/see'kwes tray"sheuhn, si kwes-/, n.
1. removal or separation; banishment or exile.
2. a withdrawal into seclusion; retirement.
3. Law.
a. the sequestering of property.
b. confiscation or seizure.
4. Chem. the combining of metallic ions with a suitable reagent into a stable, soluble complex in order to prevent the ions from combining with a substance with which they would otherwise have formed an insoluble precipitate, from causing interference in a particular reaction, or from acting as undesirable catalysts.
[1350-1400; ME < LL sequestration- (s. of sequestratio), equiv. to sequestrat(us) (ptp. of sequestrare to SEQUESTER) + -ion- -ION]

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In law, a writ authorizing a law-enforcement official to take into custody the property of a defendant in order to enforce a judgment or to preserve the property until a judgment is rendered.

In some civil-law jurisdictions, contested property may be deposited with a third party until it is determined to whom it properly belongs.

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law
      in its broadest legal sense, the removal of property from a person in possession of the property. In international law, sequestration denotes the seizure of property of an individual by a government, which uses it to its own benefit. A judicial sequestration involves a court decree ordering a sheriff, in some cases, to seize property pending a decision by the court as to who is entitled to it.

      In Roman law two persons who fought over a piece of property gave control over it to a third, the sequester, until the dispute could be settled. Later courts, after appointing a sequestrator to take possession of the property, would retain the property until the noncomplying party submitted to the court's order. The appointing of a sequestrator is now rare, although sequestration itself is a part of both the civil- and common-law systems.

      The purpose of sequestration, in most instances, is essentially one of preservation. The property remains in the custody of the court until it is determined to whom the property belongs. Consequently, under certain statutes, the court may return the sequestered property if a bond is posted to ensure that either the property or indemnification will be available to the rightful owner. See also receivership.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • sequestration — Sequestration …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • séquestration — [ sekɛstrasjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1810; « mise sous séquestre » 1390; lat. sequestratio ♦ Action de séquestrer (qqn), état d une personne séquestrée. « le travail est impossible en prison : le travail ne pouvant s obtenir que dans une séquestration… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • sequestration — se·ques·tra·tion /ˌsē kwəs trā shən, ˌse / n 1: the act of sequestering: the state of being sequestered 2 a: a writ authorizing an official (as a sheriff) to take into custody the property of a defendant usu. to enforce a court order, to exercise …   Law dictionary

  • Sequestration — Seq ues*tra tion, n. [L. sequestratio: cf. F. s[ e]questration.] 1. (a) (Civil & Com. Law) The act of separating, or setting aside, a thing in controversy from the possession of both the parties that contend for it, to be delivered to the one… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Sequestration — Sequestration, eine besondere Art des Depositum, welche darin besteht, daß die Aufbewahrung einer Sache, weil Streit darüber entstanden od. aus anderen Gründen, einem unparteiischen Dritten (Sequester) anvertraut wird, welcher sich verpflichtet… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Sequestration — (lat.), die Anordnung, daß eine Sache, bezüglich deren Streit zwischen zwei Parteien besteht, einem Dritten (dem Sequester) übergeben werde, damit er sie zur Sicherung der Ansprüche des Berechtigten aufbewahre. Die S., mit der regelmäßig eine… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Sequestration — (lat.), Zwangsverwaltung, die Anvertrauung eines in Streit befangenen Gegenstandes an einen Dritten (Sequester) zwecks Aufbewahrung und Verwaltung bis zur Herausgabe der Sache an den Berechtigten nach entschiedenem oder sonst erledigtem… …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Sequestration — Sequestration, Zwangsverwaltung im Fall der Verhängung des Konkurses über das Vermögen einer Eisenbahn oder aus anderen Gründen (zur Erzwingung der dem Unternehmer obliegenden konzessionsmäßigen oder sonstigen öffentlich rechtlichen… …   Enzyklopädie des Eisenbahnwesens

  • Sequestration — Sequestration,die:⇨Zwangsverwaltung …   Das Wörterbuch der Synonyme

  • sequestration — (n.) c.1400, from L.L. sequestrationem, noun of action from pp. stem of L. sequestrare (see SEQUESTER (Cf. sequester)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • sequestration — [sē΄kwə strā′shən, si kwes΄trā′shən] n. [ME sequestracion < MFr < LL sequestratio] 1. a sequestering or being sequestered; seclusion; separation 2. a) the taking and holding of property pending resolution of a legal dispute b) confiscation… …   English World dictionary

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