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Heritance - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Poinding

of carrying off the effects on the land in payment of such debts as are debita fundi, or heritable;personal poinding is the poinding of movables for debt or for rent, etc. There is also a species of

Mokurrari istimarari

Mokurrari istimarari, the words 'makurrari istimarari' do not in their lexicographical sense primarily imply any heritage character in the grant as the term 'mourosi' does; but they imply permanency from which in a secondary

Liege poustie

(legitima potestate], a state of health which gave a person lawful power in Scotland to dispose of his heritable property either mortis causa or otherwise. But the Scots Law of Deathbed has now been abolished by 34

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Inhibition

the debtor or party inhibited is prohibited from contracting any debt which may become a burden on his heritable property. See 31 & 32 Vict. c. 101, s. 156, and Sch. (20 A writ prohibiting and discharging

Hereditary revenues

part of the Consolidated Fund.' Sect. 2 of the Act of 1837 directed the produce of all the heritous rates, duties, payments, and revenues in England, Scotland, and Ireland respectively, and also the small branches of the

Odal

Among the early and medieval Teutonic peoples esp Scandinavians the heritable land held by the various odalmen constituting a family or kindred of freeborn tribesmen also the ownership of

Denizen

the (English) Naturalization Act, 1870; for his parent, through whom he must claim, being an alien, had no heritable blood and therefore could convey none to his son. No denizen can be of the Privy Council, or

Debt

of a personal representative within the limits therein set out. It is a chose in action and is heritable and assignable and it is treated as property in India under the Transfer of Property Act which calls

Curtesy of England

I, 1 Reeve, 298; Cham. On Est., c. iii., p. 92. In Scotland, the liferent of a wife's heritable estate accorded ex lege to her surviving husband. There musthave been a child of themarrige who would be

Church of Scotland

transfer all ecclesiastical property and endowments, as well as the responsibility, for their maintenance and control, from the heriters to the Church itself. In 1929 union took place between the church of Scotland and the United Free

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Heritance - 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.

Poinding

of carrying off the effects on the land in payment of such debts as are debita fundi, or heritable;personal poinding is the poinding of movables for debt or for rent, etc. There is also a species of

Mokurrari istimarari

Mokurrari istimarari, the words 'makurrari istimarari' do not in their lexicographical sense primarily imply any heritage character in the grant as the term 'mourosi' does; but they imply permanency from which in a secondary

Liege poustie

(legitima potestate], a state of health which gave a person lawful power in Scotland to dispose of his heritable property either mortis causa or otherwise. But the Scots Law of Deathbed has now been abolished by 34

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Inhibition

the debtor or party inhibited is prohibited from contracting any debt which may become a burden on his heritable property. See 31 & 32 Vict. c. 101, s. 156, and Sch. (20 A writ prohibiting and discharging

Hereditary revenues

part of the Consolidated Fund.' Sect. 2 of the Act of 1837 directed the produce of all the heritous rates, duties, payments, and revenues in England, Scotland, and Ireland respectively, and also the small branches of the

Odal

Among the early and medieval Teutonic peoples esp Scandinavians the heritable land held by the various odalmen constituting a family or kindred of freeborn tribesmen also the ownership of

Denizen

the (English) Naturalization Act, 1870; for his parent, through whom he must claim, being an alien, had no heritable blood and therefore could convey none to his son. No denizen can be of the Privy Council, or

Debt

of a personal representative within the limits therein set out. It is a chose in action and is heritable and assignable and it is treated as property in India under the Transfer of Property Act which calls

Curtesy of England

I, 1 Reeve, 298; Cham. On Est., c. iii., p. 92. In Scotland, the liferent of a wife's heritable estate accorded ex lege to her surviving husband. There musthave been a child of themarrige who would be

Church of Scotland

transfer all ecclesiastical property and endowments, as well as the responsibility, for their maintenance and control, from the heriters to the Church itself. In 1929 union took place between the church of Scotland and the United Free

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