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possibility of reverter

possibility of reverter :a future interest in property that is retained by the grantor of a conditional fee or determinable fee and by which property reverts to the grantor upon the occurrence of a particular event...

tail

tail [Anglo-French, literally, cutting, from Old French, from taillier to cut, prune] 1 : the condition of being limited or restricted by entailing [a tenant in ] 2 : entail adj : limited as to tenure...

Freehold

An estate in real property of inheritance in fee simple or fee tail or for life or the tenure by which such estate is held

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Aid of the King

Aid of the King [auxilium regis, Lat.], the king's tenant prays this, when rent is demanded of him by others. A city or borough, holding a fee-farm from the king, if anything be demanded which belongs...

Amobh

Amobh [fr. am-gobr, fee], the fee paid to a lord on the marriage of a female, Anc. Inst. Wales.

Apprendre

Apprendre [Fr.,]. A fee or profit apprendre is fee or profit to be taken or received, such as exercising the right of common. Jac. Law Dict.

Consummation

Consummation, of tenancy by the curtesy is when a husband, upon his wife's death, becomes entitled to hold her lands in fee simple or fee tail, of which she was seised during the marriage, for his...

Consumption and use

Consummation, of tenancy by the curtesy is when a husband, upon his wife's death, becomes entitled to hold her lands in fee simple or fee tail, of which she was seised during the marriage, for his...

Curtesy of England

Curtesy of England [jus curialitatis Angli', Lat.], an estate which by favour of the law of England arises by act of law, and is that interest which a husband has for his life in his wife's...

Dote unde nihil habet

Dote unde nihil habet, a writ of dower that lay for the widow against the tenant, who bought land of her husband in his lifetime, whereof he was solely seised in fee-simple or fee-tail, and of...

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Fees - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

possibility of reverter

possibility of reverter :a future interest in property that is retained by the grantor of a conditional fee or determinable fee and by which property reverts to the grantor upon the occurrence of a particular event...

tail

tail [Anglo-French, literally, cutting, from Old French, from taillier to cut, prune] 1 : the condition of being limited or restricted by entailing [a tenant in ] 2 : entail adj : limited as to tenure...

Freehold

An estate in real property of inheritance in fee simple or fee tail or for life or the tenure by which such estate is held

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Aid of the King

Aid of the King [auxilium regis, Lat.], the king's tenant prays this, when rent is demanded of him by others. A city or borough, holding a fee-farm from the king, if anything be demanded which belongs...

Amobh

Amobh [fr. am-gobr, fee], the fee paid to a lord on the marriage of a female, Anc. Inst. Wales.

Apprendre

Apprendre [Fr.,]. A fee or profit apprendre is fee or profit to be taken or received, such as exercising the right of common. Jac. Law Dict.

Consummation

Consummation, of tenancy by the curtesy is when a husband, upon his wife's death, becomes entitled to hold her lands in fee simple or fee tail, of which she was seised during the marriage, for his...

Consumption and use

Consummation, of tenancy by the curtesy is when a husband, upon his wife's death, becomes entitled to hold her lands in fee simple or fee tail, of which she was seised during the marriage, for his...

Curtesy of England

Curtesy of England [jus curialitatis Angli', Lat.], an estate which by favour of the law of England arises by act of law, and is that interest which a husband has for his life in his wife's...

Dote unde nihil habet

Dote unde nihil habet, a writ of dower that lay for the widow against the tenant, who bought land of her husband in his lifetime, whereof he was solely seised in fee-simple or fee-tail, and of...

  • Last »

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