Barring - Law Dictionary Search Results
Surrender of copyholds
copyholds was not the subject of surrender, except in the instance of a surrender for the purpose of barring an entail, but it was assignable. The assignee of an equitable estate, on taking a surrender from the
Bar, plea in
Bar, plea in, a pleading showing some ground for barring or defeating an action at Common Law. A plea in bar was therefore distinguished from all pleas of
Spirits
Finance Acts. As o licences for the sale of spirits by retail, see INTOXICATING LIQUORS; and as to barring of action for price of spirits sold in small quantities, see TIPPLING ACT.
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Protector of the settlement
was to be appointed as stated in substitution for the old tenant to the pr'cipe, whose concurrence in barring estates-tail in remainder was required in order to preserve, under certain modifications, the control of the tenant for
Perpetuity
exempt from the per-petuity rule:- (1) A limitation expectant upon an entail, for it can be destroyed by barring the entail; but should the entail be preceded by a term for years, and its trusts be postponed
In addition and without prejudice to any powers
any powers, in s. 14 of the Official Secrets Act 1923, is merely an enabling and not a barring provision and it reserves the inherent powers of the court to exclude the public from the proceedings if
Disentailing Deed
133, the necessity for enrolment in the case of disentailing deeds executed after 1925 is abolished. The conveyance barring the entail may be made by a simple conveyance either upon trust for or absolutely to the grantor.
Donis conditionalibus, Statute de
Act, 1833 (3 & 4 Wm. 4, c. 74), which substituted an enrolled deed as the mode of barring an estate tail. Enrolment is not necessary, see Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 133. See Challis's Real
order
forum except execution of the judgment and from which an appeal will lie gag order : an order barring public disclosure or discussion (as by the involved parties or the press) of information relating to a case
hot cargo
unfairly by their employer adj : of, relating to, or being an agreement between labor and an employer barring the employer from using or otherwise dealing with the products of another employer whose employees are nonunion NOTE:
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Barring - Law Dictionary Search Results
Surrender of copyholds
copyholds was not the subject of surrender, except in the instance of a surrender for the purpose of barring an entail, but it was assignable. The assignee of an equitable estate, on taking a surrender from the
Bar, plea in
Bar, plea in, a pleading showing some ground for barring or defeating an action at Common Law. A plea in bar was therefore distinguished from all pleas of
Spirits
Finance Acts. As o licences for the sale of spirits by retail, see INTOXICATING LIQUORS; and as to barring of action for price of spirits sold in small quantities, see TIPPLING ACT.
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Protector of the settlement
was to be appointed as stated in substitution for the old tenant to the pr'cipe, whose concurrence in barring estates-tail in remainder was required in order to preserve, under certain modifications, the control of the tenant for
Perpetuity
exempt from the per-petuity rule:- (1) A limitation expectant upon an entail, for it can be destroyed by barring the entail; but should the entail be preceded by a term for years, and its trusts be postponed
In addition and without prejudice to any powers
any powers, in s. 14 of the Official Secrets Act 1923, is merely an enabling and not a barring provision and it reserves the inherent powers of the court to exclude the public from the proceedings if
Disentailing Deed
133, the necessity for enrolment in the case of disentailing deeds executed after 1925 is abolished. The conveyance barring the entail may be made by a simple conveyance either upon trust for or absolutely to the grantor.
Donis conditionalibus, Statute de
Act, 1833 (3 & 4 Wm. 4, c. 74), which substituted an enrolled deed as the mode of barring an estate tail. Enrolment is not necessary, see Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 133. See Challis's Real
order
forum except execution of the judgment and from which an appeal will lie gag order : an order barring public disclosure or discussion (as by the involved parties or the press) of information relating to a case
hot cargo
unfairly by their employer adj : of, relating to, or being an agreement between labor and an employer barring the employer from using or otherwise dealing with the products of another employer whose employees are nonunion NOTE:
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