Beneficial Use - Law Dictionary Search Results
Goods
subject to the sales tax laws, a claim to the beneficial interest in movable property not in the Vendee's possession is … all materials, articles and commodities whether or not to be used in the construction, fitting out, improve-ment or repair of movable
Power
sed. qu., if the power is appendant to a joint beneficial interest or estate in the donees. Wills in execution of … own benefit or for that of others. The word is used as a technical term and is distinct from the dominion
trust
rate because the settlor has the power to control the beneficial enjoyment of the trust, retains a reversionary interest in the … principal, settlor NOTE: Trusts developed out of the old English use. The traditional requirements of a trust are a named beneficiary
Owner
a person in whom it is for the time being beneficially vested, and who has the occupation, or control, or usufruct, … of the premises in connection with which the word is used, whether on his own account or as agent or trustee,
Tenant
the other does not abruptly become a trespasser. If a beneficial legislation gives him protection against eviction he can claim protection … and does not necessarily mean a lessee unless it is used in opposition to landlord, Ekambara Ayyar v. Meenatchi Ammal, 1904
Wills
will, to whom or to whose wife or husband any beneficial devise, legacy, estate, interest, gift, or appointment, of or affecting … disposable property. ''But in law ultima voluntas in scriptis is used, where lands or tenements are devised, and testamentum, when it
Entertainment
3 SCR 812. Ordinarily, 'entertainment' connotes something which may be beneficial for mental or physical well being but is not essential … to an irresistible inference that the word entertainment' has been used in a very wide sense so as to include within
Easement
or occupier of certain land possesses, a such, for the beneficial enjoyment of that land, to do and continue to do … continuous, such as a path or road; discontinuous, for intermittent use; apparent or patent; non-apparent, where there is no external indication
Cousin
their issue have been debarred from any claim to the beneficial interest in property either real or personal on the death … brothers and sisters and implies consanguinity, but it is sometimes used in a loose and vague sense without any such implication,
Distress
of an under-tenant, lodger, or other person not having any beneficial interest in the tenancy, by the (English) Law of Distress … the above are absolutely privileged, as also things in actual use. (11) Beasts of the plough and sheep, by 51, Hen.
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