Skip to content

Future Goods - 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.

Fixtures

part of the freehold, is considered to have abandoned all future right to it, so that it would be waste in … the tenant paying any rent due, etc., avoiding or making good damage, giving the landlord notice before removal, and allowing the

Discontinuance

discontinuances has now become of no account, as far as future transactions are concerned, not merely inconsequence of the abolition of … was entitled to do; in which case the estate was good, so far as his power extended to make it, but

Composition

commutation of tithes, e.g., that such lands shall for the future be discharged from payment of tithes, by reason of some … the transfer to private use, or independently (or additionally) acquired goods, Fisher v. Finanzamt Burgdorf (ECJ), (2002) 2 WLR 1207. Is

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Bond

or to restrain marriage, or for immoral considerations, such as future, but not past, cohabitation, and also in total restraint of … DEBENTURES. Bonds are also executed to secure duty on dutiable goods to the Crown while in a merchant's or shipper's warehouse.

Attornment

to acknowledge the new landlord to be his landlord. Any future payment or non-payment of rent does not affect the relationship … all grants and conveyances of lands, rents, reversions, etc., are good without the attornment of the tenants, but notice of the

condition

condition 1 : an uncertain future act or event whose occurrence or nonoccurrence determines the rights … the will of the obligated party must be fulfilled in good faith. resolutory condition [re-zə-lü-tə-rē-, ri-zÄ l-y-tōr-ē-] in the civil law

Vested remainder

to a vested remainder having a present vested right of future enjoyment, i.e., an estate in pr'senti, to take effect in … for life, but not with the remainder; the remainder is good, having been duly vested by a god title. See Fearne,

  • Next ›

Try the research workspace - 7 days free


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial