Dictionary Definition
mulct n : money extracted as a penalty [syn:
fine, amercement]
Verb
1 deprive of by deceit; "He swindled me out of my
inheritance"; "She defrauded the customers who trusted her"; "the
cashier gypped me when he gave me too little change" [syn: victimize, swindle, rook, goldbrick, nobble, diddle, bunco, defraud, scam, gyp, con]
2 impose a fine on; "he was fined for
littering"
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
pecuniary penalty
- Spanish: multa
Translations
impose a fine
- Spanish: multar
Extensive Definition
A fine is money paid usually to superior
authority, usually governmenal authority, and in respect of a
crime, but also in some other contexts.
Criminal penalty
The most usual use of the term, fine, relates to a financial punishment for the commission of minor crimes or as the settlement of a claim. A synonym, typically used in civil law actions, is mulct.One common example of a fine is money paid for
violations of traffic
laws. Currently in English
Common Law relatively small
fines are used either in place of or alongside community
service orders for low-level criminal offences. Larger fines
are also given independently or alongside shorter prison sentences where the
judge or magistrate
considers a considerable amount of retribution is necessary but
there is unlikely to be significant danger to the public. For
instance, fraud is often
punished by very large fines since fraudsters are typically
debarred from the position or profession they abused to commit
their crimes.
A day-fine is a fine
that, above a minimum, is based on personal income.
Fines are considered to be a cost-efficient and
fair way of punishment for those who commit a non-violent offense.
Lengthy prison sentences for minor offenses such as drug possession
cost taxpayers more, remove otherwise productive citizens from
society, and impose a fear on society as a whole because of
over-policing and excessive prosecution.
Early examples of fines include the Weregild or
blood
money payable under Anglo-Saxon
common
law for causing a death. The murderer would be expected to pay
a sum of money or goods dependent on the social status of the
victim.
Fines in English land transactions
A fine on alienation, in feudal law, was a sum of money paid to the lord by a tenant when he had occasion to make over his land to another. It is similar in nature to a relief, a payment made by an heir to the lord to receive his inheritance. The term fine is also a synonym for a premium, a sum paid to the landlord at the start of a lease or for the extension of the term of an exisitng lease (for example, to add an additional life to the term of a lease for lives).A fine of lands (sometimes called a final
concord) was a species of conveyance (abolished in England in
1833). It took the form of a fictitious suit compromised or
terminated by the acknowledgment of the previous owner that such
land was the right of the other party (a purchaser or other
grantee). The court provided each party with a copy 'chirograph' of
the fine and kept a third copy (known as a foot of fine). This was
a necessary part of English conveyancing, where a wife was
consenting to bar her right to dower, or in certain circumstances
where an entail was to be
barred. In other circumstances, a Common
Recovery was necessary for this purpose.
See also
mulct in Czech: Pokuta
mulct in Danish: Bøde
mulct in German: Geldstrafe
mulct in Spanish: Multa
mulct in French: Amende
mulct in Korean: 벌금
mulct in Croatian: Novčana kazna
mulct in Indonesian: Denda
mulct in Italian: Multa
mulct in Hebrew: קנס
mulct in Lithuanian: Bauda
mulct in Dutch: Boete
mulct in Japanese: 罰金
mulct in Norwegian: Bot
mulct in Norwegian Nynorsk: Bot
mulct in Polish: Grzywna (prawo)
mulct in Portuguese: Multa
mulct in Simple English: Fine
mulct in Swedish: Böter
mulct in Chinese: 罰金
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
amerce,
amercement, beat, beguile of, bilk, bleed, bunco, burn, cheat, chisel, chouse, chouse out of, claim, cog, cog the dice, con, cozen, crib, damages, defraud, demand, diddle, distrain, distraint, distress, do in, do out of,
escheat, escheatment, estreat, euchre, exact, finagle, fine, flam, fleece, flimflam, fob, forfeit, forfeiture, fudge, gouge, gull, gyp, have, hocus, hocus-pocus, levy a
distress, milk, pack the
deal, penalty, pigeon, practice fraud upon,
require, rook, scam, sconce, screw, sell gold bricks, shave, shortchange, stack the
cards, stick, sting, sweat, swindle, take a dive, thimblerig, throw a fight,
victimize