Erasure - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: erasureRasure, or Erasure
Rasure, or Erasure, the act of scraping or shaving.Means the scraping or shaving of a document's surface to remove the writing from it, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., 1268.Rasure of a deed, so as to alter it in a material part, without consent of the party bound by it, etc., will make the same void, and if it be rased in the date after delivery, it is said it goes through the whole. Where a deed by rasure, addition, or alteration becomes no deed, the defendant may plead non est factum, 5 Rep. 23, 119.A rasure or interlineation in a deed is presumed, in the absence of rebutting evidence, to have been made at or before its execution, but in a will it is presumed to have been made after its execution. See INTERLINEATION....
Erasure
The act of erasing a scratching out obliteration...
palimpsest
A parchment which has been written upon twice the first writing having been erased to make place for the second The erasures of ancient writings were usually carried on in monasteries to allow the production of ecclesiastical texts such as copies of church services and lives of the saints The difficulty of recovering the original text varied with the process used to prepare the parchment for a fresh writing the original texts on parchments which had been washed with lime water and dried were easily recovered by a chemical process but those erased by scraping the parchment and bleaching are difficult to interpret Most of the manuscripts underlying the palimpsests that have been revived are fragmentary but some are of great historical value One Syriac version of the Four Gospels was discovered in 1895 in St Catherines Monastery at Mount Sinai by Mrs Agnes Smith Lewis See also the notes below...
Rasure
The act of rasing scraping or erasing erasure obliteration...
Deed
Deed [fr. d'd, Sax.; ded gaded, Goth.;daed, Dut.], a formal document on paper or parchment duly signed, sealed, and delivered. It is either an indenture (factum inter partes) needing an actual indentation [(English) Real Property Act, 1845 (8 & 9 Vict. c. 106), s. 5], reproduced by the Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 56 (2), made between two or more persons in different interests, or a deed-poll (charta de una parte) made by a single person or by two or more persons having similar interests. By the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 57, a deed may be described according to the nature of the transaction, e.g., 'this lease,' 'this mortgage,' etc., or as a 'deed' and not habitually by the word 'indenture.'The requisites of a deed are these:-(1) Sufficient parties and a proper subject of assurance.(2) It must be written, engrossed, printed, or lithographed, or partly written or engrossed, and partly printed or lithographed in any character or in any language, on paper, vellum, or parchm...
Interlineation
Interlineation, the insertion of any matter in a writ-ten instrument after it is engrossed or executed. A deed may be avoided by interlineation, unless a memorandum be made thereof at the time of the execution or attestation. If there be any inter-lineation or erasure in the jurat of an affidavit, the affidavit cannot be read, unless authenticated by initials of officer, etc., R.S.C. 1883, Ord. XXXVIII., r. 12.Interlineations in a will after execution, except so far as not 'apparent' (as to which see Ffinch v. Combe, 1894, P. 191), must, by s. 21 of the (English) Wills Act, 1837 (7 Wm. 4 & 1 Vict. c. 26), be executed as the Will itself (see WILL), but the signature of the testator and the subscriptions of the witnesses may be by initials. See INITIALS....
Re-sure
Re-sure, means the scraping or showing of a document's surface to remove the writing from it; erasure, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1268....
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