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Irregular Heir - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: irregular heir

irregular heir

irregular heir see heir ...


heir

heir : one who inherits or is entitled to succeed to the possession of property after the death of its owner: as a : one who by operation of law inherits the property and esp. the real property of a person who dies without leaving a valid will used in jurisdictions whose law is based on English common law called also heir at law heir general legal heir compare issue b in the civil law of Louisiana : one who succeeds to the estate of a person by will or esp. by operation of law see also intestacy, unworthy compare ancestor, devisee, legatee, next of kin, successor apparent heir : heir apparent in this entry beneficiary heir in the civil law of Louisiana : an heir who exercises the benefit of inventory which limits the amount of his or her liability for the decedent's debts bod·i·ly heir : heir of the body in this entry forced heir : an heir who cannot be disinherited except for causes recognized by law ;esp in the civil law of Louisiana : an heir who because of yo...


Irregular

Not regular not conforming to a law method or usage recognized as the general rule not according to common form not conformable to nature to the rules of moral rectitude or to established principles not normal unnatural immethodical unsymmetrical erratic no straight not uniform as an irregular line an irregular figure an irregular verse an irregular physician an irregular proceeding irregular motion irregular conduct etc Cf Regular...


Heir

Heir [fr. heire, Old Fr.; h'res, Lat.], a person who succeeds by descent to an estate of inheritance. It is nomen collectivum, and extends to all heirs; and under heirs, the heirs of heirs are comprehended in infinitum.A person who, under the laws of intestacy, is entitled to receive an intestate decedents property, esp. real property, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 727.The (English) Admin. Of Estates Act, 1925, s. 45, having abolished all modes of descent of real property obtaining before 1st January, 1926, in regard to deaths taking place after 1925, except in a few cases (see DESCENT and DEVOLUTION), the importance of the 'heir' had diminished but the following note has been retained since the word 'heir' will be construed according to its meaning under the general law in force before 1926, in deeds and wills executed after 1925, under which the 'heir' may become entitled to an equitable interest in personality and realty corresponding to a real estate by purchase under the ol...


Irregularity

Irregularity, disorder, departure from rule. By (English) R.S.C. 1883, Ord. LXX., non-compliance with the rules renders proceedings liable to be set aside as irregular, but does not render them void unless the Court or a judge so direct. Order LIV., r. 24, of the (English) County Court Rules, 1903, is to the same effect.The word 'irregularity' in common English parlance means and implies contrary to rule, Rambhau v. State of Maharashtra, AIR 2001 SC 2120 (2122): (2001) 4 SCC 759. (Cr. P.C., 1973, s. 391)The word irregularity' in s. 131(2)(b) cannot be confined to procedural defects only, Martin Burn Ltd. v. Corporation of Calcutta, AIR 1966 SC 529 (534): (1966) 1 SCR 543. [Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923 (3 of 1923), s. 131(2)(b)]...


Nullity and irregularity

Nullity and irregularity, as to 'irregularity' it has been stated that it is 'want of adherence to some prescribed rule or mode of proceeding'; whereas 'nullity' is 'a void act or an act having no legal force or validity'. The safest rule of distinction between an 'irregularity' and a 'nullity' is to see whether 'a party can waive the objection: if he can waive, it amounts to irregularity and if he cannot, it is a nullity', Krishan Lal v. State of J&K, (1994) 4 SCC 422 (432)....


Illegal, incorrect or irregular decree and void decree

Illegal, incorrect or irregular decree and void decree, the distinction between a decree which is void and a decree which is wrong, incorrect, irregular or not in accordance with law cannot be overlooked or ignored. Where a court lacks inherent jurisdiction in passing a decree or making an order, a decree or order passed by such court would be without jurisdiction, non est and void ab initio. A defect of jurisdiction of the court goes to the root of the matter and strikes at the very authority of the court to pass a decree or make an order. Such defect has always been treated as basic and fundamental and a decree or order passed by a court or an authority having no jurisdiction is a nullity. Validity of such decree or order can be challenged at any stage, even in execution or collateral proceedings. All irregular or wrong decrees or orders are not necessarily null and void. An erroneous or illegal decision, which is not void, cannot be objected in execution or collateral proceedings, B...


Expectant heir

Expectant heir. A person to whom property will accrue on the death of another person. expectant heirs wishing to anticipate this property have frequently borrowed money, to be repaid when the expected property shall devolve upon them. From the uncertainty of this period, the unsoundness of the security which the expectant heir can offer, and from the pressing character of his immediate necessities, the rate of interest is necessarily higher than that upon an ordinary loan, and is frequently very much higher than the risk run by the lender requires. At Common Law all such loans are good, and the interest upon them, however high, recoverable. By the Usury Acts, indeed-which, however, did not apply to loans to expectant heirs with any greater rigour than to loans to other persons'they were for a long period of yeas subject to the restriction that only a fixed maximum rate of interest could be exacted, but the Usury Acts were repealed in 1854 by 17 & 18 Vict. c. 90. See USURY.From very ear...


irregularity

irregularity pl: -ties : something that is irregular [an in the proceeding] ...


Irregularity

The state or quality of being irregular that which is irregular...


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