Enjoyer - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: enjoyerQuiet enjoyment
Quiet enjoyment. A qualified covenant for quiet enjoyment is usually inserted in leases and excludes the implied covenant, which is far more extensive. For the implied covenant may guarantee the lessee against any lawful entry whatever, whereas the express covenant, as usually worded, guarantees the lessee only against entry by the lessor or persons 'claiming by, from, or under him,' so that a lessor having no title to the demised premises may safely enter into the qualified covenant for quiet enjoyment, for an ejectment of the lessee by the real owner would not be an ejectment by a person claiming by the lessor, but against him, See Woodfall, L. & T., and Baynes v. Lloyd, (1895) 2 QB 610; Jones v. Lavington, (1903) 1 KB 253.A covenant for quiet enjoyment is implied by virtue of s. 7 of the (English) Conveyancing Act, 1881, reproduced under ss. 76 and 77 of the Law of Property Act, 1925, Sched. 2, Parts 1, 2, in any conveyance for value made after the commencement of that Act by a pers...
Enjoy
To take pleasure or satisfaction in the possession or experience of to feel or perceive with pleasure to be delighted with as to enjoy the dainties of a feast to enjoy conversation...
Enjoyable
Capable of being enjoyed or of giving joy yielding enjoyment...
Enjoyment
The condition of enjoying anything pleasure or satisfaction as in the possession or occupancy of anything possession and use as the enjoyment of an estate...
Enjoy
Enjoy, means to have, possess, and use with satisfaction, to hold or occupy, as a good or profitable thing or as something desirable, as we enjoy many privileges (Webster's Dictionary) see also Municipal Corporation Chandigarh v. Shantikunj Investment Pvt. Ltd., AIR 2006 SC 1270: (2006) 4 SCC 109: (2006) 3 JT 1: (2006) 2 SCALE 712: (2006) 2 Supreme 400: (2006) 2 SLT 592: (2006) 3 SCJ 558: (2006) 3 SCJD 93: (2006) 4 SRJ....
enjoyment
enjoyment : personal benefit, use, or possession (as of rights or property) [widows and widowers were relegated to lifetime of the marital estates "W. M. McGovern, Jr. et al."] ;specif : the receipt of the fruits or profits of property see also right of use, usufruct ...
Enjoyer
One who enjoys...
Self enjoyment
Enjoyment of ones self self satisfaction...
Prescription
Prescription [fr. pr'scribo, Lat.], title produced and authorised by long usage. It is known in the Roman Law as usucapio.Title by prescription arises from a long-continued and uninterrupted possession of property, and is thus defined by Sir Edward Coke (Co. Litt. 113 b), Pr'scriptio est titulus ex usu et tempore substantiam capiens ab authoritatelegis. (Prescription is a title taking his substance of use and time allowed by the law.)Every species of prescription, by which property is acquired or lost, is founded on the presumption that he who has had a quiet and uninterrupted possession of anything for a long period of years is supposed to have a just right, without which he would not have been suffered to continue in the enjoyment of it. For a long possession may be considered as a better title than can commonly be produced, as it supposes an acquiescence in all other claimants; and that acquiescence also supposes some reason for which the claim was foreborne, 1 Cruise's Dig., tit. X...
Property
Property, an actionable claim against the tenants is undoubtedly a species of property which is assignable, State of Bihar v. Kameshwar Singh, AIR 1952 SC 252.Comprises every form of tangible property, even intangible, including debts and chooses in action such as unpaid accumulation of wages, pension, cash grants, and constitutionally protected privy purse, See M.M. Pathak v. Union of India, AIR 1978 SC 802.Decree is to be treated as property, Associated Hotels of India v. Jodha Mal Kuthiala, AIR 1950 Punj 201.Every movable property is included in the ordinary connotation of the word 'property', Chunni Lal v. State, AIR 1968 Raj 70.In commercial law this may carry its ordinary meaning of the subject-matter of ownership. But elsewhere, as in the sale of goods it may be used as a synonym for ownership and lesser rights in goods, Dictionary of Commercial Law by A.H. Hudson, (1983, Edn.).In Entry 42, List III (Constitution of India) includes the power to legislate for acquisition of an un...
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