OoUS 
OUSOURI, se town of Chinefe Tartary; 67 miles 
. of T 
5SO OOR, a town of Hindooftan, i in Myfore ; 69 miles 
ENE of Seringapatam, N. lat. 1 2°>41. E. long. 77? 
2', 
? UST, a town of France, in the slits ment of the Ar- 
riege, and chief place of a canton, in diftri@ of St. 
Girons ; 74 miles S. of St. Girons. The place contains 1190, 
and the canton a oo on a territory of 525 
kiliometres, in 10 mu 
S a peek a “Norway, in the province of 
Chriftianfand. 
TED, formed from the French offer, to remove, or 
take away, in our Coils t Law Books, a being removed, or 
put out of poffe 
USTER, or iD secession, in Law, is an injury that 
carries with it the amotion of poffeffion ; ; for thereby the 
wrong-doer gets into the adtual occupation of the land or 
hereditament, and obliges him that hath a right to feek his 
legal remedy, in order to gain poffeffion, and damages for 
the i leds fuftained. This oufter may either be of the free- 
hold by abatement, ek i pee diffe dif ifiny dt aa and de- 
forcement ; or of chatrels real, as an eit ftatute-mer- 
ee baa ftaple, or pied or an ae . for 
perfon dies feifed of au. ae 
who has n 
or an injury to a 
i But this a ends a upon the feveral ftatutes, 
which recite thefe refpective interelts, and which exprefsly 
nd allo 
provide w this remedy, in cafe of difpoffeffion. 
(The ttatutes are er oe S04 I. c. 18. Stat. 
Stat. 23 Hen. VITI. 
Co ke obferves (1 Inft. 43. )s that thefe tenants are faid to 
hold their eftates ad liberum tenementum, until their debts = 
yt the ftatutes they fhall have an affile, a 
. e; and in that refpe& they 
have the fimilitude of a freeho 
As for oufter, or amotion of poffeffion, for an eftate for 
years; this di tts only by a like kind of diffeifin, Acaragii 
the tenant from the occupatio of the 
of eedione firma, which lies on eich ee oie , the leffor, re- 
verfioner, remainder-man, or any ftran er, who is himfelf 
the wrong-doer, and has committed the injury complained 
of ; and the writ of quare ejectt infra terminum, which lies not 
againtt the wrong-doer or ejector himfelf, in his feoffee, or 
other perfon aoe under him. ia e mixed actions, 
fomewhat between real and perfonal ; for Geen are two 
things pent as well reftitution e the term of years, a8 
precy as for the oufter er wrong. See Eyectione Firme, 
and Quake gecit, &c. 
USTER le Main, amovere manum, denotes a livery of 
lands out of the king’s hands; or a ig ra given for him 
that ed. or fued, a monftrans le dro 
OUT 
f When it appeared upon the matter difcuffed, that the king 
land h 
ad no right or title to the es feized, Us ae was 
given in chancery, that the king’ s hand be amoved 
upon, ouffer le main, or umoveas manum, was awarded to fe 
slcheator, to reftore the lan Ne Be. 
But now all wardfhips, liveries, oufter le mains, &c. are 
taken away and difcharged, by ftat. 12 Car. IL. c. 
R le Mer, a caufe of excufe or effo in; he rea 
pearing in court upon fummons, it is alleged, 
that he is pa the feas. 
ea Language, a term implying the fituation of 
the fails, ae they o - or ex eae to affift the fhip’s 
courfe, oppo 3. whic alfo applied, in the 
contrary fenfe, to fignify. when fice is are furled. Sce 
v 
t of Trim, the ftate of a fhip, when her beft failing 
qualities are retarded by the ai arrangement of the 
mafts and fails, or ftowage of her cargo, which will con- 
sar ien affe& the fhip’s motion and ftabil ity. 
Winding, in Ship-Building, ee twifting, but 
that the Gees whether of timber or plank, be a dire 
lan 
Ors Ousfi. de, or Without, in the — is the contrary 
of in, infide, inner, &e. See In, Inn, 
Out Field Land, in Agriculture, a term Se to a fort 
. land in Scotland, which is fimilar to the uninclofed com- 
on field-lands in this country. Dundonald remarks, 
that that part of the farm, called the out oe land, never 
t two or three 
fame barbarous fyftem of hufband 
It was a fort of diftinétion chat exifled prior to the date 
of inclofures, and was likewife general throughout England. 
It is wearing out faft in Scotland, from the fame caufes 
which have operated in England. 
OUTAITANT, in Geography, a town of Upper Siam ; 
80 miles N.W. of Lou 
tides peal a town of Bengal, on the Ganges ; 
5 miles §. of Rayem 
OUTAPA ALLAY. a town of Hindooftan; 10 miles 
E.N.E. of Coimbetor 
OUTARD — a on of eee on the mie a of 
the river St. Lawrence. N. lat. 42° 2’. . lon Pa). 
OUT- BOARD, in Sea Langage on the aie a the 
fhip, as “the out-board works,’ 
OUTCH, in Geography, a ee of Hindooftan, be- 
tween the rivers Chunaub and Indus, near the ocean. 
OUTCHACTAL, atown of Thibet; 67 miles E. of 
Haracher-Hotun. 
OUTCHANG, a town of China, of the firft rank, in 
Ho ou-quang, on the river Yang-tfe; 582 miles S. of Pe eking. 
N. lat. Ze aie E. long. 113 
OU-TCHEOU, a city of China, of the firft rank, in 
"50. 
the fecond order, a 
partly mountainous, and partly flat. 
cinnabar, and an uncommon tree, called a Loe 
