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Ejection - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Chattels or catals

by personal action (see TROVER), while a mixed action of ejectment (q.v.), in which the plaintiff could recover the specific property

Writ

actions (except in dower unde nihil habet, quare impedit or ejectment), expressly naming sixty abolished writs (e.g., the writ of right

Vesting

is sought to recover possession of the trust property by ejecting trespassers who are wrongfully in possession of it, Johnson D.

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Tenants' Compensation Act, 1890

concurrence of the mortgagee, is a mere tres-passer, liable to ejectment without notice, and so liable to lose all his growing

Super-institution

the party who obtains it to try his title by ejectment, without putting him to his quare impedit; but many inconveniences

Sufferance, Tenancy at

and wrongful, or demands possession, or brings his action of ejectment to recover possession, which he may do without any previous

Restitution, Writ of

of restitution may also be awarded when a judgment in ejectment is upset. Restitution takes place when there has been a

Presumption of life or death

an absence of seven years, and the lessee may be ejected, with the proviso, however, that if he should turn out

Lessor of the plaintiff

Lessor of the plaintiff. See EJECTMENT.

Presbyterians

and when the Presbyterian ministers who filled the churches were ejected by the Act of Uniformity in 1662 they spread over

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