Pasturer - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: pasturerPasture
Pasture, land on which cattle feed. See Norton on Deeds.The laying down permanent pasture with the written consent of the landlord is an improvement for which a tenant is entitled to compensation on quitting by the (English) Agricultural Holdings Act, 1923; and so is, though without any consent or notice, laying down temporary pasture with clover, grass, lucerne, sainfoin, or other seeds, sown more than two years before the termination of the tenancy. See AGRICULTURAL HOLDINGS ACT.Breaking up pasture is frequently prohibited by penal rents and otherwise in agricultural leases, and s. 29 of the (English) Agricultural Holdings Act, 1923, which restricts penal rents to the actual damage done, excepts 'breaking up permanent pasture,' amongst other things, from its operation. See Rush v. Lucas, (1910) 1 Ch 437, and Aggs on Agricultural Holdings....
Boosey [or Boosy] Pasture
Boosey [or Boosy] Pasture, a pasture with a shed on or by it, by custom of the country or written agreement in the north-western counties of England frequently allowed, till May 1, or 12, to outgoing tenants whose tenancy expires on the 2nd February or 25th March....
Permanent pasture
Permanent pasture, See PASTURE....
Pasturable
Fit for pasture...
Pasture land
Pasture land, is a place of land covered with grass. They may be interchangeable, Gulabhai Vallabhbhai Desai v. H.A. Khan, Collector of Daman, AIR 1970 Goa 59....
Secunda superoneratione pastur'
Secunda superoneratione pastur'. See SECOND SURCHARGE, WRIT OF....
Superoneratione pastur'
Superoneratione pastur', a judicial writ that lay against him who was impleaded in the county court for the surcharge of a common with his cattle, in a case where he was formerly impleaded for it in the same Court, and the cause was removed into one of the superior courts, Ibid. Obsolete....
Pasturer
One who pastures one who takes cattle to graze See Agister...
Approvement
Approvement, improvement, as where there exists a right of common of pasture on a lord's waste, and the lord encloses part of such waste, leaving sufficient common of pasture, as he is bound to do by the Statue of Merton, 20 Hen. 3, c. 4, which prescribes in what cases lords may 'approve' against tenants; and see 13 Edw. 1, st. 2, c. 46; and INCLOSURE....
Sheep-heaves
Sheep-heaves. 'Small plots of pasture often in the middle of a waste . . . the soil of which may or may not be in the lord, but the pasture is certainly a private property, and is leased and sold as such.'-Cooke, Inclos. Acts, 44....
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