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Consideration

Act, 1925, s. 60, which provides that in a voluntary conveyance made after that year a resulting trust will not be

unity

be identical as it relates to the cotenants [such a conveyance severs the joint tenancy by removing the unities of time

Dower

alienation, highly inconvenient and obstructive of the free course of conveyances. The legislature by the 27 Hen. 8, c. 10 (the

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demise

demise de·mised de·mis·ing : to convey (possession of property) by will or lease [the demised premises]

Feoffment

2 of the latter Act, all real property, as regards conveyance of the immediate freehold thereof, is transferable as well by

Execution

so that when used in their proper sense, all three convey the meaning of carrying out some act or course of

Settled land

Wimborne & Browne (1904) 1 Ch 537; Wolstenholme & Cherry, Conveyancing, etc., Acts. Prior to 1856 settled estates could not be

Trust for sale

for life under the Settled Land Act, 1925, and land conveyed to them in exercise of those powers must be to

Release

right of action (see SURETY CON-SIDERATION); also a Common Law conveyance of a larger estate, or a remainder, or reversion to

Purchase, Words of

in Shelley's case, when the ancestor by any gift or conveyance takes an estate of freehold, and in the same gift

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