Dispossess - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: dispossess Page: 2 Page 2 of about 44 results (0.002 seconds)Ouster
Ouster, dispossession.A wrong or injury that may be sustained in respect of hereditaments, corporeal or incorporeal, carry-ing with it the deprivation of possession; for thereby the wrongdoer gets into the actual occupation of the land or hereditament, and obliges him that has a right to seek his legal remedy in order to gain possession and damage for the injury sustained. Such dispossession may be either of the freehold or of chattels real.Ouster of the freehold was effected by various methods: 1, abatement; 2, intrusion; 3, disseisin; 4, discontinuance; and 5, deforcement.Ouster of chattels real consists: 1st, of a motion of possession from estates held by statute, recogni-zance, or elegit, which happens by a species of disseisin or turning out of the legal proprietor before his estate is determined, by raising the sum for which it is given to him in pledge; and 2nd, of a motion of possession from an estate of years, which takes place by a like kind of disseisin, ejection, or turning...
Dispossession
Dispossession, Voluntary giving up of possession does not amount to dispossession unless the law provides for it. 'Dispossess' according to Black's Law Dictionary means: 'To oust from land by legal process; to eject, to exclude from realty.' The dispossession should have been, therefore, either by legal process or by physical act of exclusion, Thondiram Tatoba Kadam v. Ram chandra Balwantrao Dubal, (1994) 3 SCC 366.Dispossession, occurs where a person come in and drives out the others from possession, Buckinghamshire County Council v. Moran, (1990) Ch 623.That an uncompleted contract for the sale of charity land was not a 'disposition' of that land for the purpose of s. 36(1) and (2) of the 1993 Act; that s. 37(4) could only validate a disposition to which s. 36(1) or (2) applied......... deputy Judge, Boyoumi v. Women's Total Abstinence Educational Union Ltd., (2004) 2 WLR 181 [Charities Act, 1993 (C 10), ss. 36, 37(4)]....
Disproperty
To cause to be no longer property to dispossess of...
Disseise
Disseise, to dispossess, to deprive....
disseisin
disseisin or dis·sei·zin [di-sēz-n] n [Anglo-French disseisine, from Old French dessaisine, from dessaisir to dispossess see disseise ] : the act of disseising : the state of being disseised ...
eject
eject : dispossess ...
Disfranchise
To deprive of a franchise or chartered right to dispossess of the rights of a citizen or of a particular privilege as of voting holding office etc...
divest
divest [Anglo-French devestir, literally, to undress, from Old French desvestir, from de(s)-, prefix marking reversal + vestir to dress, from Latin vestire] : to deprive or dispossess (oneself) of property through divestiture di·vest·ment n ...
Disseize
To deprive of seizin or possession to dispossess or oust wrongfully one in freehold possession of land followed by of as to disseize a tenant of his freehold...
Evirate
To emasculate to dispossess of manhood...
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