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Pasturer - Law Dictionary Search Results
Esplees
Esplees [fr. expleti', Lat.], the products of land; as the hay of meadows, herbage of pasture, corn of arable land, rents, services, etc.; also the lands, etc., themselves, Termes de la Ley.1. Products yielded from land, 2. Rent or other payments derived from land, 3. Land itself, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 565....
Doles, or Dools
Doles, or Dools, slips of pasture left between the furrows of ploughed land....
Disbocatio
Disbocatio, a turning wooded ground into arable or pasture...
Dalus, Dailus, Dailia
Dalus, Dailus, Dailia, a certain measure of land; such narrow slips of pasture as are left between the ploughed furrows in arable land. See Jac. Law Dict...
Common of fishery
Common of fishery, is a liberty of fishing in another man's waters in common with certain other person. It may be held as either appurtenant to a house or land (but not to a pasture), or in gross, but it appurtenant may not be without stint, Halsbury's Laws of England, para 617, p. 262....
Croft
Croft [A.S., fr. Creaft, Old Eng., handicraft, or croit, Gael., a hump], a little close adjoining to a dwelling house or homestead, and enclosed for pasture, or arable, or any particular use....
Common land
Common land, means land subject to rights of common (which includes cattlegates or beastgates and rights of sole or several vesture or herbage or of sole of several pasture, but not rights held for a term of years or from year to year). Whether those rights are exercisable at all time or only during limited periods, and waste land of a manor not subject to rights of common, but does not include a town or village green or any land forming part of a Highway, Commons Registration Act, 1965, s. 22(1); Animals Act, 1971, s. 11 (UK) Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 2, para 474, p. 240....
Common
Common, a profit which a man has in the land of another; it derives its name from the community of interest which thence arises between the claimant and the owner of the soil, or between the claimant and other commoners entitled to the same right; all which parties are entitled to bring actions for injuries done to their respective interests, and that both as against strangers and against each other. It is called an incorporeal right, which lies in grant, as if originally commencing in some agreement between lords and tenants, for some valuable consideration which, by lapse of time, being formed into a prescription, continues, although there be no deed or instrument in writing which proves the original contract or agreement. It differs from a rent, principally in freedom of enjoyment on the one hand, and in freedom from obligation on the other; which the law expresses by the quaint antithesis that it lies not in render but in prender. It is also incidentally distinguished by its fruits...
Chacea
Chacea, a station of game, more extended than a park, and less than a forest; also the liberty of chasing or hunting within a certain district; also the way through which cattle are driven to pasture, otherwise called a drove-way, Blount; Bract. 1. 4, c. xliv....
Cattle-gate
Cattle-gate, common for one beast.Gated or stinted pastures are types of commonable lands which prevail largely in the north of England and the rights over them are known by a number of different names, such as cattlegate, beastgate, pasturegate, Mellington v. Goodtitle, (1738) Andr 106....
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