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Leases, Ecclesiastical

Leases, Ecclesiastical. Leases by ecclesiastical corporations are made under certain restrictions imposed

Foregift

taken for an ecclesiastical lease; see, e.g., the (English) Ecclesiastical Leases Act, 1842 (5 & 6 Vict. c. 108), s. 30.

Glebe

years with consent of patron and bishop, see (English) Ecclesiastical Leases Act, 1842 (5 & 6 Vict. c. 27); and as

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Corn-rent

that one-third of the whole rent then paid on college leases should be reserved in wheat or malt, reserving a quarter … Act, though specially saved by s. 7 of the (English) Ecclesiastical Leases Act, 1800 (39 & 40 Geo. 3, c. 41),

Fore-hand rent

in advance. A premium paid by tenant on making of lease; esp. on renewal of lease by an ecclesiastical corporation Black's

Disabling Statutes

similar Acts, restraining the power of ecclesiastical corporations to make leases.

Forfeiture

of covenant before 1926, retrospective, so as to apply to leases made before its passing, and (2) incapable of being nullified … mentioned above, there are two which obtain in reference to ecclesiastical property, viz., (1) lapse; and (2) simony. Forfeiture, according to

Tithe Rent-Charge

of the fee-simple unless it is subject to a long lease of more than 14 years at a rent less than … to be taken in the case of agricultural land and ecclesiastical tithe rent-charge at 91l. 11s. 2d. per cent. of the

Chapter

and disposing the things thereof, and the confirmation of such leases of the temporality and offices relating to the bishopric, as … Chapter [fr. Apitulum, Lat.], a congregation of ecclesiastical persons in a cathedral church, consisting of canons or prebendaries

Magna Carta

of religion to take the lands of any, and to lease the same to him of whom it received them. If … of trying the right to present a priest to an ecclesiastical benefice. The 14th chapter is directed against excessive fines, and

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