| slovo | definícia |  
sheriff (mass) | sheriff
  - šerif |  
sheriff (encz) | sheriff,šerif	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  
Sheriff (gcide) | Sheriff \Sher"iff\, n. [OE. shereve, AS. sc[imac]r-ger?fa;
    sc[imac]r a shire + ger?fa a reeve. See Shire, and Reeve,
    and cf. Shrievalty.]
    The chief officer of a shire or county, to whom is intrusted
    the execution of the laws, the serving of judicial writs and
    processes, and the preservation of the peace.
    [1913 Webster]
 
    Note: In England, sheriffs are appointed by the king. In the
          United States, sheriffs are elected by the legislature
          or by the citizens, or appointed and commissioned by
          the executive of the State. The office of sheriff in
          England is judicial and ministerial. In the United
          States, it is mainly ministerial. The sheriff, by
          himself or his deputies, executes civil and criminal
          process throughout the county, has charge of the jail
          and prisoners, attends courts, and keeps the peace. His
          judicial authority is generally confined to
          ascertaining damages on writs of inquiry and the like.
          Sheriff, in Scotland, called sheriff depute, is
          properly a judge, having also certain ministerial
          powers. Sheriff clerk is the clerk of the Sheriff's
          Court in Scotland. Sheriff's Court in London is a
          tribunal having cognizance of certain personal actions
          in that city. --Wharton, Tomlins. Erskine.
          [1913 Webster] Sheriffship
          Sheriffry
          Sheriffdom
          Sheriffalty |  
sheriff (wn) | sheriff
     n 1: the principal law-enforcement officer in a county |  
sheriff (devil) | SHERIFF, n.  In America the chief executive office of a country, whose
 most characteristic duties, in some of the Western and Southern
 States, are the catching and hanging of rogues.
 
     John Elmer Pettibone Cajee
     (I write of him with little glee)
     Was just as bad as he could be.
 
     'Twas frequently remarked:  "I swon!
     The sun has never looked upon
     So bad a man as Neighbor John."
 
     A sinner through and through, he had
     This added fault:  it made him mad
     To know another man was bad.
 
     In such a case he thought it right
     To rise at any hour of night
     And quench that wicked person's light.
 
     Despite the town's entreaties, he
     Would hale him to the nearest tree
     And leave him swinging wide and free.
 
     Or sometimes, if the humor came,
     A luckless wight's reluctant frame
     Was given to the cheerful flame.
 
     While it was turning nice and brown,
     All unconcerned John met the frown
     Of that austere and righteous town.
 
     "How sad," his neighbors said, "that he
     So scornful of the law should be --
     An anar c, h, i, s, t."
 
     (That is the way that they preferred
     To utter the abhorrent word,
     So strong the aversion that it stirred.)
 
     "Resolved," they said, continuing,
     "That Badman John must cease this thing
     Of having his unlawful fling.
 
     "Now, by these sacred relics" -- here
     Each man had out a souvenir
     Got at a lynching yesteryear --
 
     "By these we swear he shall forsake
     His ways, nor cause our hearts to ache
     By sins of rope and torch and stake.
 
     "We'll tie his red right hand until
     He'll have small freedom to fulfil
     The mandates of his lawless will."
 
     So, in convention then and there,
     They named him Sheriff.  The affair
     Was opened, it is said, with prayer.
                                                      J. Milton Sloluck
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SHERIFF (bouvier) | SHERIFF. The name of the chief officer of the county. In Latin he is called 
 vice comes, because in England he represented the comes or earl. His name is 
 said to be derived from the Saxon seyre, shire or county, and reve, keeper, 
 bailiff, or guardian. 
      2. The general duties of the sheriff are, 1st. To keep the peace within 
 the county; he may apprehend, and commit to prison all persons who break the 
 peace or attempt to break it, and bind any one in a recognizance to keep the 
 peace. He is required ex officio, to pursue and take all traitors, 
 murderers, felons and rioters. He has the keeping of the county gaol and he 
 is bound to defend it against all attacks. He may command the posse 
 comitatus. (q.v.) 
      3.-2d. In his ministerial capacity, the sheriff is bound to execute 
 within his county or bailiwick, all process issuing from the courts of the 
 commonwealth. 
      4.-3d. The sheriff also possesses a judicial capacity, but this is very 
 much circumscribed to what it was at common law in England. It is now 
 generally confined to ascertain damages on writs of inquiry and the like. 
      5. Generally speaking the sheriff has no authority out of his county. 2 
 Rolle's Rep. 163; Plowd, 37 a. He may, however, do mere ministerial acts out 
 of his county, as making a return. Dalt. Sh. 22. Vide, generally, the 
 various Digests and Abridgments, h.t.; Dalt. Sher.; Wats. Off. and Duty of 
 Sheriff; Wood's Inst. 75; 18 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 177; 2 Phil. Ev. 213; Chit. 
 Pr. Index, h.t.; Chit. Pr. Law, Index, h.t. 
 
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