Intermedious - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: intermediousIntermediate level
Intermediate level, 'intermediate level' means a level between the village and district levels specified by the Governor of a State by public notification to be the intermediate level of the purposes of this Part. [Constitution of India, Article 243(c)]...
Intermediate
Lying or being in the middle place or degree or between two extremes coming or done between intervening interposed interjacent as an intermediate space or time intermediate colors...
intermediate
intermediate 1 : being or occurring at the middle place, stage, or degree or between extremes [an order] 2 : of, relating to, or being a level of judicial scrutiny to ensure equal protection of the laws that is applied to a statute involving classification of persons and that is more intensive than the rational basis test and not as severe as strict scrutiny [ review] [ scrutiny] in·ter·me·di·ate·ly adv ...
intermediate court
intermediate court : a court (as an appeals court) beneath the court of last resort in a jurisdiction ...
Intermediate Court of Appeals
Intermediate Court of Appeals :the court of appeals in Hawaii ...
intermediate term mortgage
intermediate term mortgage a mortgage loan with a contractual maturity from the time of purchase equal to or less than 20 years. Source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development ...
Intermedial
Lying between intervening intermediate...
Intermediately
In an intermediate manner by way of intervention...
Intermedious
Intermediate...
Merger
Merger [fr. mergo, Lat., to sink], an annihilation, by act of law, of a particular in an expectant estate consequent upon their union in the same person without an intervening estate in another person--thus accelerating into possession the expectant which swallows up the particular estate. It is the drowning of one estate in another, and differs from suspension, which is but a partial extinguishment for a time; while extinguishment, properly so termed, is the destruction of a collateral thing in the subject itself out of which it is derived. 'In order that there may be a merger, the two estates which are supposed to coalesce must be vested in the same person at the same time and in the same right' [Re Radcliffe, (1892) 1 Ch 231, per Lindley, LJ]. An estate tail, however is an exception to the rule; for a man may have in his own right both an estate tail and a reversion in fee; and the estate tail, though a less estate, will not merge in the fee, 2 Bl. Com. 177.The doctrine of merger pr...
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