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legate


5 definitions found

legate - Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 :

  Legate \Leg"ate\ (l[e^]g"[asl]t), n. [OE. legat, L. legatus, fr.
     legare to send with a commission or charge, to depute, fr.
     lex, legis, law: cf. F. l['e]gat, It. legato. See Legal.]
     1. An ambassador or envoy.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. An ecclesiastic representing the pope and invested with
        the authority of the Holy See.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     Note: Legates are of three kinds: (a) Legates a latere, now
           always cardinals. They are called ordinary or
           extraordinary legates, the former governing provinces,
           and the latter class being sent to foreign countries on
           extraordinary occasions. (b) Legati missi, who
           correspond to the ambassadors of temporal governments.
           (c) Legati nati, or legates by virtue of their
           office, as the archbishops of Salzburg and Prague.
           [1913 Webster]
  
     3. (Rom. Hist.)
        (a) An official assistant given to a general or to the
            governor of a province.
        (b) Under the emperors, a governor sent to a province.
            [1913 Webster]

legate - WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) :

  legate
      n 1: a member of a legation [syn: legate, official emissary]

legate - Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856) :

  LEGATES. Legates are extraordinary ambassadors sent by the pope to catholic 
  countries to represent him, and to exercise his jurisdiction. They are 
  distinguished from the ambassadors of the pope who are sent to other powers. 
       2. The canonists divide them into three kinds, namely: 1. Legates A 
  latere. 2. Legati missi. 3. Legati nati. 
       3.-1. Legates latere hold the first rank among those who are honored 
  by a legation; they are always chosen from the college of cardinals, and are 
  called a latere, in imitation of the magistrates of ancient Rome, who were 
  taken from the court, or side of the emperor. 
       4.-2. The legati missi are simple envoys. 
       5.-3. The legati nati, are those who are entitled to be legates by 
  birth. 
  
  

  LEGATEE. A legatee is a person to whom a legacy is given by a last will and 
  testament. 
       2. It is proposed to consider, 1. Who may be a legatee. 2. Under what 
  description legatees may take. 
       3.-1. Who may be a legatee. In general, every person may be a 
  legatee. 2 Bl. Com. 512. But a person civilly dead cannot take a legacy. 
       II. Under what description legatees may take. 
       4.-1. Of legacies to legitimate children. 1. When it appears from 
  express declaration, or a clear inference arising upon the face of the will, 
  that a testator in giving a legacy to a class of individuals generally, 
  intended to apply the terms used by him to such persons only as answered the 
  description at the date of the instrument, those individuals alone will be 
  entitled, although if no such intention had been expressed, or appeared in 
  the will, every person failing within that class at the testator's death, 
  would have been included in the terms of the bequest. 1 Meriv. 320; and see 
  3 Ves. 611; Id. 609; 15 Ves. 363; Ambl. 397; 2 Cox, 291; 4 Bro. C. C. 55; 3 
  Bro. C. C. 148; 2 Cox, 384. 
       5.-2. Where a legacy is given to a class of individuals, as to 
  children, in general terms, and no period is appointed for the distribution 
  of it, the legacy is due at the death of the testator; the payment of it 
  being merely postponed to the end of a year after that event, for the 
  convenience of the executor or administrator in administering the assets. 
  The rights of the legatees are finally settled, and determined at the 
  testator's decease. 1 Ball & B. 459; 2 Murph. 178. Upon this principal, is 
  founded the well established rule that children in existence at that period, 
  or legally considered so to be, are alone entitled to participate in the 
  bequest. 1 Bro. C. C. 532, n.; 2 Bro. C. C. 658; 2 Cox, 190.; 1 Dick. 344; 
  14 Ves. 576; 1 Ves. jr. 405; 1 Cox, 68; 3 Bro. C. C. 391; Amb. 448; 1 Ves. 
  sen. 485; 5 Binn. 607. 
       6.-3. A child in ventre sa mere takes a share in a fund bequeathed to 
  children, under the general description of "children," or of "children 
  living at the testator's death." 1 Ves. sen. 85; and see 1 P. Wms. 244, 341; 
  2 Bro. C. C. 63; 1 Salk. 229; 2 Cox, 425; 5 Serg. & Rawle, 38. See tit. In 
  ventre sa mere. 
       7.-4. When legacies are given to a class of individuals, generally, 
  payable at a future period, as to the children of B, when the youngest shall 
  attain the age of twenty-one, or to be divided among them upon the death of 
  C; any child who can entitle itself under the description, at the time when 
  the fund is to be divided, may claim a share, viz: as well children living 
  at the period of distribution, although not born till after the testator's 
  death, as those born before, and living at the happening of that event. 1 
  Supp. to Ves. jr. 115, note 3, to Hill v. Chapman; 2 Supp. to Ves. jr. 157, 
  note 1, to Lincoln v. Pelham. This general rule may be divided into two 
  branches. First,  when the division of the fund is postponed until a child 
  or children attain a particular age; as, when a legacy is given to the 
  children of A, at the age of twenty-one; in that case, so soon as the eldest 
  arrives at that period, the fund is distributable among so many as are in 
  existence at that time; and no child born afterwards can be admitted to a 
  share, because the period of division fixes the number of legatees. 
  Distribution is then made, and nothing remains for future partition. 1 Ball 
  & Beat. 459; 3 Bro. C. C. 402; 5 Binn. 607; 2 Ves. jr. 690; 3 Ves. 730; 3 
  Bro. C. C. 352, ed. by Belt; 14 Ves. 256; 6 Ves. 345; 10 Ves. 152; 11 Ves. 
  238. Second, when the distribution of the fund is deferred during the life 
  of a person in esse. In these cases, when the enjoyment of the thing given, 
  is by the testator's express declaration not to be immediate by those, among 
  whom it is to be finally divided, but is postponed to a particular period, 
  as the death of A, then the children or individuals who answer the general 
  description at that time, when distribution is to be made, are entitled to 
  take, in exclusion of those afterwards coming in esse. 1 Ves. sen. 111; 1 
  Bro. C. C. 386; Id. 530; Id. 582; Id. 537; 1 Atk. 509; 2 Atk. 329; 5 Ves. 
  136; 3 Bro. C. C. 417; 1 Cox, 327; 8 Ves. 375; 15 Ves. 122; 1 Madd. R. 290; 
  1 Ball & Beat. 449. 
       8.-5. The word "children" does not, ordinarily and properly speaking, 
  comprehend grandchildren or issue generally; these are included in that term 
  only in two cases, namely, 1. From necessity, which occurs where the will 
  would remain inoperative unless the sense of the word "children" were 
  extended beyond its natural import; and, 2. Where the testator has shown by 
  other words, that he did not intend to use the term children in its proper 
  and actual meaning, but in a more extended sense. 1 Supp. to Ves. jr. 202, 
  note 2, to Bristow v. Ward. In the following cases, the word children was 
  extended beyond its natural import from necessity. 6 Rep. 16; 10 Ves. 201; 2 
  Desaus. R. 123, in note. The following are instances where by using the 
  words children and issue, indiscriminately, the testator showed his 
  intention to use the former term in the sense of issue so as to entitle 
  grandchildren, &c. to take. 1 Ves. sen. 196; S. C. Ambl. 555; 3 Ves. 258; 3 
  Ves. & Bea. 68; 4 Ves. 437; 2 Supp. to Ves. jr. 158. There is another class 
  of cases wherein it was determined that grandchildren, &c. were not included 
  in the word children. 2 Vern. 107; 4 Ves. 692; 10 Ves. 195; 3 Ves. & Bea. 
  59; see 2 Desauss. 308. 
       9.-2. Of legacies to natural children. 1. Natural children unborn at 
  the date of the will, cannot take under a bequest to the children generally, 
  or to the illegitimate children of A B by Mary C; because a natural child 
  cannot take as the issue of a particular person, until it has acquired the 
  reputation of being the child of that person, which cannot be before its 
  birth. Co, Litt. 3, b. 
      10.-2. Natural children, unborn at the date of the will and described 
  as children of the testator or another man, to be born of a particular 
  woman, cannot take under such a description. 1 Peere, Wms. 529; 18 Ves. 288. 
      11.-3. A legacy to an illegitimate child in ventre sa mere, described 
  as the child of the testator or of another man, will fail, since whether the 
  testator or such person were or were not in truth the father, is a fact 
  which can only be ascertained by evidence that public policy forbids to be 
  admitted. 1 Meriv. 141 to 152. 
      12.-4. A child in ventre sa mere described merely as a child with 
  which the mother is enceinte, without mentioning its putative father; or if 
  the testator express a belief that the child is his own, and provide for it 
  under that impression, regardless of the chance of being mistaken; then the 
  child will in the first place be capable of taking and in the second, as 
  presumed, be also, entitled in consequence of the testator's intent to 
  provide for it, whether he be the father or not. 1 Meriv. 148, 152. 
      13.-5. Natural children in existence, having acquired by reputation 
  the name and character of children of a particular person, prior to the date 
  of the will, are capable of taking under the name of children. 1 P. Wms. 
  529; 1 Ves. & Bea. 467. But the term child, son, issue, and every other word 
  of that species, is to be considered as prima facie to mean legitimate 
  child, son, or issue. Id. 
      14.-6. Whether such children take or not depends upon the evidence of 
  the testator's intention, manifested by the will, to include them in the 
  term children; these cases are instances where the evidence of such 
  intention was deemed insufficient. 5 Ves. 530; 1 Ves. & Bea. 454; 6 Ves. 43, 
  48; 1 Ves. & Bea. 4619; and see 1 Ves. & Bea. 456; 2 East, 530, 542. In the 
  following, the evidence of intention was held to be sufficient. 1 Ves. & 
  Bea. 469; Blundell v. Dunn, cited in 1 Madd. 433; Beachcroft v. Beachcroft, 
  cited in 1 Madd. 430; 2 Meriv. 419. 
      15.-3. Of legacies of personal estate to a man and his heirs. 1. A 
  legacy to A and his heirs, is an absolute legacy to A, and the whole 
  interest of the money vests in him for his use. 4 Mad. 361. But when no 
  property in the bequest is given to A, and the money is bequeathed to his 
  heirs, or to him with a limitation to his heirs, if he die before the 
  testator, and the contingency happens, then if there be nothing in the will 
  showing the sense in which the testator made use of the word heirs, the next 
  of kin of A, are entitled to claim under the description, as the only 
  persons appointed by law to succeed to personal estate. 5 Ves. 403; 4 Ves. 
  649; 1 Jac. & Walk. 388. 
      16.-2. A bequest to the heirs of an individual, without addition or 
  explanation, will belong to the next of kin; the rule, however, is subject 
  to, alteration by the intention of the testator. If then the contents of the 
  will show, that by the word heirs the testator meant other persons than the 
  next of kin, those persons will be entitled. Ambl. 273; 1 P. Wms. 432; 
  Forrest, 56; 2 Atk. 89; See, also, 1 Ves. jr. 145; 4 Madd. 361; 14 Ves. 488; 
  1 Car. Law R. 484. 
      17.-4. Legacies to issue. 1. The term issue, is of very extensive 
  import, and when used as a word of purchase, and unconfined by any 
  indication of intention, will comprise all persons who can claim as 
  descendants from or through the person to whose issue the bequest is made; 
  and in order to restrain the legal sense of the term, a clear intention must 
  appear upon the will. 3 Ves. 257; Id. 421; 1 Meriv. 434; 13 Ves. 344. 
      18.-2. Where it appears clearly to be a testator's meaning to provide 
  for a class of individuals living at the date of his will, and he provides 
  against a lapse by the death of any of them in his lifetime, by the 
  substitution of their issue; in such case, although the word will include 
  all the descendants of the designated legatees, yet if any person who would 
  have answered the description of an original legatee when the will was made, 
  be then dead, leaving issue, that issue will be excluded, because the issue 
  of those individuals only who were capable of taking original shares, at the 
  date of the will, were intended to take by substitution; so that as the 
  person who was dead when the will was made, could never have taken an 
  original share, there is nothing for his issue to take in his place. 1 
  Meriv. 320. 
      19.-3. When it can be collected from the will that a testator in using 
  the word issue, did not intend it should be understood in its common 
  acceptation, the import of it will be confined to the persons whom it was 
  intended to comprehend. 7 Ires. 531; 3 Ves. 383; 7 Ves. 522; 1 Ves. jr. 143. 
      20.-5. Of legacies to relations. 1. Under a bequest to relations, none 
  are entitled but those, who in the case of intestacy, could have claimed 
  under the statute of distribution. Forrest. 251; 4 Bro. C. C. 207; 1 Bro. C. 
  C. 31; 3 Bro. C. C. 234; 5 Ves. 529; Ambl. 507; Dick. 380; 1 P. Wms. 327; 2 
  Ves. sen. 527; 19 Ves. 403; 1 Taunt. 263; 1 T. R. 435; n. See the following 
  cases where the bequests were to "poor relations;" 1 P. Wms. 327; 8 Serg. & 
  Rawle, 45; 1 Sch. & Lef. 111; "most necessitous relations;" Ambl. 636. 
      21.-2. To this general rule there are several exceptions, namely, 
  first, when the testator has delegated a power to an individual to 
  distribute the fund among the testator's relations according to his 
  discretion; in such an instance whether the bequest be made to "relations" 
  generally, or to "poor," or "poorest," or "most necessitous" relations, the 
  person may exercise his discretion in distributing the property among the 
  testator's kindred although they be not within the statute of distributions. 
  1 Scho. & Lef. 111, and 16 Ves. 43; 1 T. R. 485, n.; Ambl. 708; 16 Ves. 27, 
  43. Secondly. Another exception occurs where a testator has fixed ascertain 
  test, by which the number of relatives intended by him to participate in his 
  property, can be ascertained; as if a legacy be given to such of the 
  testator's relations as should not be worth a certain sum, in such case, it 
  seems, all the testator's relatives answering the description would take, 
  although not within the degrees of the statute of distributions. Ambl. 798. 
  Thirdly. Another exception to the general rule is, where a testator has 
  shown an intention in his will, to comprehend relations more remote than 
  those entitled nuder the statute; in that case his intention will prevail. 1 
  Bro. C. C. 32, n., and see 1 Cox, 235. 
      22.-3. The word "relation" or "relations," may be so qualified as to 
  exclude some of the next of kin from participating in the bequest; and this 
  will also happen when the terms of the bequest are to my "nearest 
  relations;" 19 Ves. 400; Coop. 275; 1 Bro. C. C. 293; and see 1 Ves. sen. 
  337; Ambl. 70; to testator's relations of his name 1 Ves. sen. 336; or 
  stock, or blood; 15 Ves. 107. 
      23.-4. The word relations being governed by the statute of 
  distributions, no person can regularly answer the description but those who 
  are of kin to the testator by blood, consequently relatives by marriage are 
  not included in a bequest to relations generally. 1 Ves. sen. 84; 3 Atk. 
  761; 1 Bro. C. C. 71, 294. 
      24.-6. Legacies to next of kin. 1. When a bequest is made to 
  testator's next of kin, it is understood the testator means such as are 
  related to him by blood. But it is not necessary that the next of kin should 
  be of the whole blood, the half blood answering the description of next of 
  kin, are equally entitled with the whole, and if nearer in degree, will 
  exclude the whole blood. 1 Ventr. 425; Alley. L. D. of Mar. 36; Sty. 74. 
      25-2. Relations by marriage are in general excluded from 
  participating in a legacy given to the next of kin. 18 Ves. 53; 14 Ves. 376, 
  381, 386; and, see 3 Ves. 244; 18 Ves. 49. But this is only a prima facie 
  construction, which may be repelled by the contrary intention of a testator. 
  14 Ves. 382. 
      26.-3. A testator is to be understood to mean by the expression "next 
  of kin," when he does not refer to the statute, or to a distribution of the 
  property as if he had died intestate, those persons only who should be 
  nearest of kin to him, to the exclusion of others who might happen to be 
  within the degree limited by the statute. 3 Bro. C. C. 69; 19 Ves. 404; 14 
  Ves. 385. See 3 Bro. C. C. 64. 
      27.-4. Nearest of kin will alone be entitled under a bequest to the 
  next of kin in equal degree. 12 Ves. 433; 1 Madd. 36. 
      28.-7. Legacies to legal personal representatives or to personal 
  representatives. 1. Where there is nothing on the face of the will to 
  manifest a different intention, the legal construction of the words 
  "personal representatives," or "legal personal representatives," is 
  executors or administrators of the person described. 6 Ves. 402; 6 Mead. 
  159. A legacy limited to the personal or legal personal representatives of 
  A, unexplained by anything in the will, will entitle A's executors or 
  administrators to it, not as representing A, or as part of his estate, or 
  liable to his debts, but in their own right as personae designated by the 
  law. 2 Mad. 155. 
      29.-2. In the following cases the executors or administrators were 
  held to be entitled under the designation of personal, or legal personal 
  representatives. 3 Ves. 486; Anstr. 128. 
      30.-3. The next of kin and not the executors or administrators, were, 
  in the following cases, held to be entitled under the same designation. 3 
  Bro. C. C. 224, approved by Lord Rosslyn in 3 Ves. 486; 3 Ves. 146; 19 Ves. 
  404. 
      31.-4. The same words were held to mean children, grandchildren, &c. 
  to the exclusion of those persons who technically answer the description of 
  "personal representatives." 3 Ves. 383. 
      32.-5. A husband or wife may take as such, if there is a manifest 
  intention in the will that they should and if either be clothed with the 
  character of executor or administrator of the other, the prima facie legal 
  title attaches to the office, which will prevail, unless an intention to the 
  contrary be expressed or clearly apparent in the instrument. See 14 Ves. 
  382; 18 Ves. 49; 3 Ves. 231; 2 Ves. sen. 84; 3 Atk. 758; 1 Rop. on H.& W., 
  326; 2 Rop. on H.& W., 64. 
      33.-8. The construction of bequests when limited to executors and 
  administrators. 1. Where personal estate is given to B, his executors and 
  administrators, the law transfers to B the absolute interest in the legacy. 
  15 Ves. 537; 2 Mad. 155. 
      34.-2. If no interest were given to B, and the bequest were to his 
  executors and administrators, it should seem that the individual answering 
  the description would be beneficially entitled as personal designatee, in 
  analogy to the devise of real estate to the heir of B, without a previous 
  limitation to B, whose heir would take by purchase in his own right, and not 
  by force of the word "heir" considered as a term of limitation. 2 Mad. 155. 
  See 8 Com. Dig. Devise of Personal Property, xxxvi. 
      35:-9. Legacies to descendants. 1. A legacy to the descendants of A, 
  will comprehend all his children, grandchildren, &c.; and if the will direct 
  the bequest to be divided equally among them, they are entitled to the fund 
  per capita. Ambl. 97; 3 Bro. C. C. 369. 
      36.-10. Legacies to a family. 1. The word family, when applied to 
  personal property, is synonymous with "kindred," or "relations;" see 9 Ves. 
  323. This being the ordinary acceptation of the word family, it may 
  nevertheless be confined to particular relations by the context of the will; 
  or the term may be enlarged by it, so that the expression may, in some 
  cases, mean children, or next of kin, and in others may even include 
  relations by marriage. See 8 Ves. 604; Dy. 333; 5 Ves. 166; Hob. 33; Coop. 
  122; 5 M. & S. 126; 17 Ves. 263; 1 Taunt. 266; 14 Ves. 488; 9 Ves. 319; 3 
  Meriv. 689. 
      37.-11. Legacies to servants. 1. To entitle himself to a bequest "to 
  servants," the relation of master and servant must have arisen out of a 
  contract by which the claimant must have formed an engagement which entitled 
  the master to the service of the individual during the whole period, or each 
  and every part of the time for which he contracted to, serve. 12 Ves. 114; 2 
  Vern. 546. 
      38.-2. To claim as a servant, the legatee must in general be in the 
  actual service of the testator at the time of his death. Still a servant may 
  be considered by a testator as continuing in his employment, and be intended 
  to take under the bequest, although he quitted the testator's house previous 
  to his death, so as to answer the description in the instrument; and to 
  establish which fact declarations of the testator upon the subject cannot be 
  rejected; but testimony that the testator meant a servant notwithstanding 
  his having left the testator's service, to take a legacy bequeathed only to 
  servants in his employment at his death, cannot be received as in direct 
  opposition to the will. 16 Ves. 486, 489. 
      39.-12. The different periods of time at which persons answering the 
  descriptions of next of kin, family relations, issue, heirs, descendants and 
  personal representatives, (to whom legacies are given by those terms 
  generally,  and without discrimination,) were required to be in esse, for 
  the purpose of participating in the legatory fund. 1. When the will 
  expresses or clearly shows that a testator in bequeathing to the relations, 
  &c. of a deceased individual, referred to such of them as were in existence 
  when the will was made, they only will be entitled; as if the bequest was, 
  "I give �1000 to the descendants of the late A B, now living," those 
  descendants only in esse at the date of the will can claim the legacy. Ambl. 
  397. 
      40.-2. But, in general, a will begins to speak at the death of the 
  testator, and consequently in ordinary cases, relations, next of kin, issue, 
  descendants, &c., living at that period will alone divide the property 
  bequeathed to them by those words. See 1 Ball &. Beat. 459; 1 Bro. C. C. 
  532; 3 Bro. C. C. 224; 5 Ves. 399; 1 Jac. & Walk, 388, n.; 3 Meriv. 689; 5 
  Binn. 607; 2 Murph. 178. 
      41.-3. If a testator express, or his intention otherwise appear from 
  his will, that a bequest to his relations, &c., living at the death of a 
  person, or upon the happening of any other event, should take the fund, his 
  next of kin only in existence at the period described, will be entitled, in 
  exclusion of the representatives of such of them as happened to be then 
  dead. 3 Ves. 486; 9 Ves. 325; 1 Atk. 469; 15 Ves. 27; 4 Vin. Abr. 485, pl. 
  16; 8 Ves. 38; 5 Binn. 606; see 6 Munf. 47. 
      42.-13. When the fund given to legatees, by the description of 
  "family," "relations" "next in kin," &c., is to be divided among them either 
  per capita, or per stirpes, or both per stirpes et capita. 1. Where the 
  testator gives a legacy to his relations generally, if his next of kin be 
  related to him in equal degree, as brothers, there being no children of a 
  deceased brother, the brothers will divide the fund among them in equal 
  shares, or per capita; each being entitled in his own right to an equal 
  share. So it would be if all the brothers had died before the testator, one 
  leaving two children, another three, &c., all the nephews and nieces would 
  take in equal shares, per capita, in their own rights, and not as 
  representing their parents; because they are sole next of kin, and related 
  to the testator in equal degree. Pre. Ch. 54; and see 1 P. Wms. 595; 1 Atk. 
  454; 3 P. Wms. 50. But if the testator's next of kin happen not to be 
  related to him in equal degrees, as a brother, and the children of a 
  deceased brother, so as that under the statute the children would take per 
  stirpes as representing their parent, namely, the share he would have taken 
  had he been living; yet if the testator has shown au intention that his next 
  of kin shall be entitled to his property in equal shares, i. e. per capita, 
  the distribution by the statute will be superseded. This may happen where 
  the bequest is to relations, next of kin, &c., to be equally divided among 
  them; or by expressions of like import. Forrest. 251; and see 1 Bro. C. C. 
  33; 8 Serg. & Rawle, 43; 11 Serg. & Rawle 103; 1 Murph. 383. 
      43.-2. Where a bequest is to relations, &c., those persons only who 
  are next of kin are entitled, and the statute of distributions is adopted, 
  not only to ascertain the persons who take, but also the proportions and 
  manner in which the property is to be divided; the will being silent upon 
  the subject, if the next of kin of the person described be not related to 
  him in equal degree, those most remote can only claim per stirpes, or in 
  right of those who would have been entitled under the statute if they had 
  been living. Hence it appears that taking per stirpes, always supposes an 
  inequality in relationship. For example, where a testator bequeaths a legacy 
  to his "relations," or "next of kin," and leaves at his death two children, 
  and three grandchildren, the children of a deceased child; the grandchildren 
  would take their parents' share, that is, one-third per stirpes under the 
  statute, as representing their deceased parent. 1 Cox, 235. 
      44.-3. Where a testator bequeaths personal estate to several persons 
  as tenants in common, with a declaration that upon all or any of their 
  deaths before a particular time, their respective shares shall be equally 
  divided among the issue or descendants of each of them, and they die before 
  the arrival of the period, some leaving children, others grandchildren, and 
  great grandchildren, and other grandchildren and more remote descendants in 
  such case the issue of each deceased person will take their parents share 
  per stirpes; and such issue, whether children only, or children and 
  grandchildren, &c., will divide each parent's share among them equally per 
  capita. 1 Ves. sen. 196. 
      45.-14. The effect of a mistake in the names of legatees. 1. Where the 
  name has been mistaken in a will or deed, it will be corrected from the 
  instrument, if the intention appear in the description of the legatee or 
  donee, or in other parts of the will or deed. For example, if a testator 
  give a bequest to Thomas second son of his brother John, when in fact John 
  had no son named Thomas, and his second son was called William; it was held 
  William was entitled. 19 Ves. 381; Coop. 229; and see Ambl. 175; Co. Litt. 
  3, a; Finch's R. 403; 3 Leon, 18. When a bequest is made to a class of 
  individuals, nominatim, and the name or christian name of one of them is 
  omitted, and the name or christian name of another is repeated; if the 
  context of the will show that the repetition of the name was error, and the 
  name of the person omitted was intended to have been inserted, the mistake 
  will be corrected. As where a testator gave his residuary estate to his six 
  grandchildren, by their christian names. The name of Ann, one of them, was 
  repeated, and the name of Elizabeth, another of them, was omitted. The 
  context of the will clearly showed the mistake which had occurred, and 
  Elizabeth was admitted to an equal share in the bequest. 1 Bro. C. C. 30; 
  see 2 Cox, 186. And is to cases where parol evidence will be received to 
  prove the mistakes in the names or additions of legatees, and to ascertain 
  the proper person, see 3 B. & A. 632 to 642; 6 T. R. 676; 2 P. Wms. 137; 1 
  Atk. 410: 1 P. Wms. 421; 5 Rep. 68, b; 6 Ves. 42; 7 East, 302; Ambl. 75. 
      46.-15. The effect of mistakes in the descriptions of legatees, and 
  the admission of parol evidence in those cases. 1. Where the description of 
  the legatee is erroneous, the error not having been occasioned by any fraud 
  practiced upon the testator, and there is no doubt as to the person who was 
  intended to be described, the mistake will not disappoint the bequest. Hence 
  if a legacy be given to a person by a correct name, but a wrong description 
  or addition, the mistaken description will not vitiate the bequest, but be 
  rejected; for it is a maxim that veritas nominis tollit errorem 
  demonstrationis. Ld. Bac. Max. reg. 25; and see 2 Ves. jr. 589; Ambl. 75; 4 
  Ves. 808; Plowd. 344; 19 Ves. 400. 
      47.-2. Wherever a legacy is given to a person under a particular 
  description and character which he himself has falsely assumed; or, where a 
  testator, induced by the false representations of third persons to regard 
  the legatee in a relationship which claims his bounty, bequeaths him a 
  legacy according with such supposed relationship, and no motive for such 
  bounty can be supposed, the law will not, in either case, permit the legatee 
  to avail himself of the description, and therefore he cannot demand his 
  legacy. See 4 Ves. 802; 4 Bro. C. C. 20. 
      48.-3. The same principle which has established the admissibility of 
  parol evidence to correct errors in naming legatees, authorizes its 
  allowance to rectify mistakes in the description of them. Ambl. 374; 1 Ves. 
  jr. 266; 1 Meriv. 184. 
      49.-4. If neither the will nor extrinsic evidence is sufficient to 
  dispel the ambiguity arising from the attempt to apply the description of 
  the legatee to the person intended by the testator, the legacy must fail 
  from the uncertainty of its object. 7 Ves. 508; 6 T. R. 671. 
      50.-16. The consequences of imperfect descriptions of, or reference to 
  legatees, appearing upon the face of wills, and when parol evidence is 
  admissible. These cases occur, 1. When a blank is left for the Christian 
  name of the legatee. 2. When the whole name is omitted. 3. When the testator 
  has merely written the initials of the name; and, 4. When legatees have been 
  once accurately described, but in a subsequent reference to one of them, to 
  take an additional bounty, the person intended is doubtful, from ambiguity 
  in the terms. 
      51.-1. When a blank is left for the Christian name of the legatee, 
  evidence is admissible to supply the omission. 4 Ves. 680. 
      52.-2. When the omission consists of the entire name of the legatee, 
  parol evidence cannot be admitted to supply the blank. 2 Ch. Ca. 51.; 2 Atk. 
  239; 3 Bro. C.C. 311. 
      53.-3. When a legatee is described by the initials of his name only, 
  parol evidence may be given to prove his identity. 3 Ves. 148. When a patent 
  ambiguity arises from an imperfect reference to one of two legatees 
  correctly described in a prior part of the will, parol evidence is admitted 
  to show which of them was intended, so that the additional legacy intended 
  for the one will depend upon the removal of the obscurity by a sound 
  interpretation of the whole will. 3 Atk. 257 and see 2 Ves. 217; 2 Eden, 
  107. 
       See further, upon this subject, Lownd on Leg. ch. 4; 1 Roper on Leg. 
  ch. 2; Com. Dig. Chancery, 3 Y; Bac. Abr. h.. t. Vin. Abr. h.t.; Nels. Abr. 
  h.t.; Whart. Dig. Wills, G. P.; Hamm. Dig. 756; Grimk. on Ex. ch. 5; 
  Toll. on Executors, ch. 4. 
  
  

legate - Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 :

  38 Moby Thesaurus words for "legate":
     ambassador, ambassadress, apostolic delegate, attache,
     career diplomat, chancellor, charge, commercial attache, commissar,
     commissary, commissionaire, commissioner, consul, consul general,
     consular agent, delegate, diplomat, diplomatic, diplomatic agent,
     diplomatist, emissary, envoy, envoy extraordinary,
     foreign service officer, herald, internuncio, messenger,
     military attache, minister, minister plenipotentiary,
     minister resident, nuncio, plenipotentiary, resident, secretary,
     secretary of legation, vice-consul, vice-legate