Let - Law Dictionary Search Results
Voyage charter-party, time charter party
time charter party, it is a contract by which an entire ship or some principal part thereof is let to a merchant who is called the charterer, for the conveyance of goods on a determined voyage to
Unius omnino testis responsio non audiatur
Unius omnino testis responsio non audiatur, let not the evidence of one witness be heard at all.
Transire
Transire, a warrant or permit from the custom-house to let goods pass.
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Tithe Rent-Charge
1891, effected a great change in this respect. By that Act, in the ordinary case of land being let by the owner to a tenant, the remedy of distress by the tithe-owner was extinguished, and recovery through
The premises
means:- (a) any land not being used for agricultural purposes; (b) any building or part of a building let separately, Raja Bahadur Motilal Bombay Mills Ltd. v. Govind Ram Brothers (P) Ltd., AIR 1974 SC 1708: (1974)
Terra affirmata
Terra affirmata, land let to farm.
Terms for years
Common Law (see LEASE), and the appropriate operative verbs therein are 'demise,' or 'grant, lease, and to farm let'; but any wards showing the intent of the parties that the one (the lessor) shall divest himself of
Tenant of buildings
Tenant of buildings, when the landlord had let the residential building together with the appurtenant land, tenancy would not be tenancy of land. Thus the tenant
Sus. Per coll
Sus. Per coll. When indictments were in Latin, this abbreviation for suspendatur per collum-'let him be hanged by the neck'-was the usual indorsement by the clerk of arraigns in the case of a capital sentence. At...
Sufficient cause
as sufficient cause. For instance economic difficulty or financial stringency or family reasons may compel a landlord to let out a building in his occupation. So long as it is found to be genuine and bona fide
- ‹ Prev
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- Next ›
- Last »
Try the research workspace - 7 days free
Let - Law Dictionary Search Results
Voyage charter-party, time charter party
time charter party, it is a contract by which an entire ship or some principal part thereof is let to a merchant who is called the charterer, for the conveyance of goods on a determined voyage to
Unius omnino testis responsio non audiatur
Unius omnino testis responsio non audiatur, let not the evidence of one witness be heard at all.
Transire
Transire, a warrant or permit from the custom-house to let goods pass.
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Tithe Rent-Charge
1891, effected a great change in this respect. By that Act, in the ordinary case of land being let by the owner to a tenant, the remedy of distress by the tithe-owner was extinguished, and recovery through
The premises
means:- (a) any land not being used for agricultural purposes; (b) any building or part of a building let separately, Raja Bahadur Motilal Bombay Mills Ltd. v. Govind Ram Brothers (P) Ltd., AIR 1974 SC 1708: (1974)
Terra affirmata
Terra affirmata, land let to farm.
Terms for years
Common Law (see LEASE), and the appropriate operative verbs therein are 'demise,' or 'grant, lease, and to farm let'; but any wards showing the intent of the parties that the one (the lessor) shall divest himself of
Tenant of buildings
Tenant of buildings, when the landlord had let the residential building together with the appurtenant land, tenancy would not be tenancy of land. Thus the tenant
Sus. Per coll
Sus. Per coll. When indictments were in Latin, this abbreviation for suspendatur per collum-'let him be hanged by the neck'-was the usual indorsement by the clerk of arraigns in the case of a capital sentence. At...
Sufficient cause
as sufficient cause. For instance economic difficulty or financial stringency or family reasons may compel a landlord to let out a building in his occupation. So long as it is found to be genuine and bona fide
- ‹ Prev
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- Next ›
- Last »
Try the research workspace - 7 days free