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Heiress - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Co-heiress

Co-heiress, a woman who had an equal share of an inheritance with another woman....


Heiress

Heiress, a female heir. Where there are several they are called co-heiresses....


Coheiress

A female heir who inherits with other heiresses a joint heiress...


Heiress

A female heir...


Inheritress

A heiress...


Maritagium habere, for Maritare

Maritagium habere, for Maritare, to have the free disposal of an heiress in marriage....


Ousterlemain

Ousterlemain [amoveremanum, Lat.], the delivery of the lands out of the guardian's hands, upon the heir attaining twenty-one, or the heiress sixteen years of age. Abolished by 12 Car. 2, c. 24.Also a livery of land out of the sovereign's hands on a judgment given for him that sued out a monstrans de droit, Staunf. Pr'rog. C. 24....


Possessio fratris

Possessio fratris, a seisin to turn the descent away from the brother of the half-blood to the sister of the whole-blood; thus, if a father had two sons, A. and B., by different wives, these two brethren were not brethren of the whole-blood, and therefore could never inherit to each other, but the estate rather escheated to the lord. Nay, even if the father died, and his lands descended to his eldest son, A., who entered thereon, and died seised without issue, still B. could not be heir to this estate, because he was only of the half-blood to A., the person last seised; but it descended to a sister (if any) of the whole-blood to A.; for in such cases the maxim was that the seisin, or possessio fratris, made the sister the heiress. Yet, had A. died without entry, B. might have inherited, not as heir to A., his half-brother, but as heir to their common father, who was the person last actually seised, 2 Bl. Com. 227. Abolished by 3 & 4 Wm. 4, c. 106....


Coparceners or parceners

Coparceners or parceners. The name given to persons who until 1926 inherited an inheritable estate by virtue of descents from the ancestor which conferred on them all an equal title to it. It arose by act of law only, i.e., by descent, which, in relation to this subject was of two kinds:-(1) Descent by the common law, which took place where an ancestor died intestate, leaving two or more females as his co-heiresses; these, according to the canon of real property inheritance, all took together as coparceners or parceners, the law of primogeniture not obtaining among women in equal relationship to their ancestor: they were, however, deemed to be one heir; and (2) descent by particular custom, as in the case of gavelkind lands, which descended to all the males in equal degree, as the sons, brothers, or uncles of the deceased intestate ancestor; in default of sons, they descended to all the daughters equally.Coparceners had a unity though not an entirety, or necessarily an equality, of int...


Real representative

Real representative. The name formerly given to a personal representative on whom real estate devolved on the death of any person between the 31st December, 1897, and the 1st January, 1926, under the provisions of the (English) Land Transfer Act, 1897.Prior to the commencement on the 1st of January, 1898, of the (English) Land Transfer Act, 1897 [see (English) TRANSFER OF LAND ACTS], the real estate of a deceased person vested in his heir, heiresses, or devisees, and his personal estate in his executors or administrators. The (English) Land Transfer act, 1897, (60 & 61 Vict. c. 65), reproduced and extended by the (English) Administration of Estates Act, 1925, established a real representative in the person of the executor or administrator of any person dying after the commencement of that Act, in whom all his real estate except copyhold was vested notwithstanding his will, unless, as in a joint tenancy, any other person had a right to take by survivorship, so that one and the same pers...


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