TITLE DEEDS. Those deeds which are evidences of the title of the owner of an estate.
2. The person who is entitled to the inheritance has a right to the possession of the title deeds. 1 arr. & Marsh1. 653.
TITLE OF A DECLARATION, pleading. At the top of every declaration the name of the court is usually stated, with the term of which the declaration is filed, and in the margin2 the venue3, namely, the city or county where the cause is intended to be tried is set down. The first two of these compose what is called the title of the declaration. 1 Tidd's Pr. 866.
TO WIT. That is to say; namely; scilicet; (q. v.) videlicet. (q. v.)
TOFT. A place or piece of ground on which, a house formerly4 stood, which has been destroyed by accident or decay; it also signifies a messuage.
TOGATI. Rom. civ, law. Under the empire, when the toga had ceased to be the usual costume of the Romans, advocates were nevertheless obliged to wear it whenever they pleaded a cause. Hence they were called togati. This denomination5 received an official or legal sense in the imperial constitutions of the fifth and sixth centuries, and the words togati, consortium (corpus, ordo, collegium,) togatorum, frequently occur in those acts.
TOKEN, contracts, crimes. A document or sign of the existence of a fact.
2. Tokens are either public or general, or privy6 tokens. They are true or false. When a token is false and indicates a general intent to defraud7, and it is used for that purpose, it will render the offender8 guilty of the crime of cheating; 12 John. 292; but if it is a mere9 privy token, as counterfeiting10 a letter in another man's name, in order to cheat but. one individual, it would not be indictable. 9 Wend. Rep. 182; 1 Dall. R. 47; 2 Rep. Const. Cr. 139; 2 Virg. Cas. 65; 4 Hawks11, R. 348; 6 Mass. IR. 72; 1 Virg. Cas. 150; 12 John. 293; 2 Dev. 199; 1 Rich. R. 244.