Patronage - Law Dictionary Search Results
Patronage
aid afforded to a person or a work as the patronage of letters patronage given to an author
Patronage
Patronage, the right of presenting to a benefice. A disturbance of
Church Patronage (Scotland) Act
Church Patronage (Scotland) Act, 1874 (37 & 38 Vict. c. 82).
Advowson
[fr. advocare, Lat.], a right of presentation to, or the patronage of, a church or spiritual living; the person possessed of
Benefice
1898, requires registration of the transfer of the right of patronage of a benefice, prohibits the sale of the right of
Dean
old foundation, though the Crown has, in fact, the real patronage; or donative, as those deans of chapters of the new
Emancipation
filius-familias sui juris. As the enfranchiser acquired all rights of patronage, the father, on occasion of the last mancipatio, added the
Goodwill
SC 1084 (Partnership Act, 1932, s. 55). A business's reputation, patronage, and other intan-gible assets that are considered when apprising the
Lapse
such case there is a devolution of the rights of patronage from a neglectful patron to the bishop as ordinary, to
Scotal, or scotale
An extortionary practice by which forest officers forced people to patronage the officers' alehouses, often in exchange for officer's ignoring forest
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