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Equitable Estates - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Equitable estates and interests

Equitable estates and interests, Rights relating to property of which the legal … Frauds (29 Car. 2, c. 3, s. 7) trusts creating equitable estates or interests in land, including leaseholds and copyholds, were required

Equitable estates

Equitable estates, corresponding to free hold estates at law, such as an … were the subject of equitable seisin, and were known as 'equitable estates', Casborne v. Scarfe, (1738) 1 Atk 603 (606). See also

equitable estate

equitable estate see estateequitable estate see estate

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Uses

of possession as to the vesting of the legal and equitable estates:- An Appointment, Bargain and Sale, or Covenant to stand seized

Law of Property Act, 1925 (English)

time. all other estate and interests inland are reduced to equitable interests. All mortgages of the same legal estate under the … land. An important change was the abolition of all legal estates or tenures in land, except an estate in fee simple

Priority

or constituted a specialty debt. The priority in legal and equitable assignments of equitable choses in action are determined accord-ing to … time. As to priority among creditors, see (English) Admin-istration of Estates Act, 1869, reproduced by ss. 32 to 34, (English) Administration

Equitable mortgage

Equitable mortgage, a mortgage under which the mortgagee does not get … mortgage under which the mortgagee does not get the legal estate. The following mortgages are equitable:- (1) Where the subject of

Equity of redemption

Equity of redemption. Before 1926 the equitable estate or interest left in a person after he had … Equity of redemption. Before 1926 the equitable estate or interest left in a person after he had mortgaged

Estate

simple, for life, for years, etc., in either legal or equitable estates. In practice its most important division is into real estate

Fee-simple

[Re Ethel, (1901) 1 Ch 945). Even in conveying an equitable fee-simple, words of limitation were essential [Re Monckton, (1913) 2 … inheritance, absolute and unqualified. It stands at the head of estates as the highest in dignity and the most ample in

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