Perpetually - Law Dictionary Search Results
Exception
RESERVATION. Under s. 162(1)(d) of the (English) Law of Properties Act, 1925, the rule of law relating to perpetuities does not apply to any exception of any right of entry or user of the surface of land,
Esquire
Esquires may be divided into five classes: (I) The younger sons of peers and their eldest sons in perpetual succession. (II) The eldest sons of knights and their eldest sons in like successiorr. (III) The chiefs of
Eleemosynary corporations
Eleemosynary corporations, corporate bodies con-stituted for the perpetual distribution of the free alms or bounty of the founder of them. Of this kind are all hospitals
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Ecclesiastical Corporations
Ecclesiastical Corporations. Corporations created for the furtherance of religion, and for the perpetuation of the rights of the church, the members of which are exclusively spiritual persons. They are of two
Drunkenness
amended by the Inebriates Act, 1888 (51 & 52 Vict. C. 19), which made the Act of 1879 perpetual, and the (English) Inebriates Act, 1898 (61 & 62 Vict. c. 60). The Act of 1879 defines an
Natural allegiance
Natural allegiance, that perpetual attachment which is due from all natural-born subject to their sovereign; local allegiance is temporary only, being due
Physician
which incorporated the physicians. By 14 & 15 Hen. 8, c. 5, this charter was confirmed, and a perpetual college of physicians established with a constitution of eight elects, etc. The subsequent history of the college is
Office of profit
Durgah Endowment is to be appointed by the Government of India but it is a body corporate with perpetual succession acting within the four corners of the Act. Merely because the committee or the members of the
Sole, Corporation
who are incorporated by law, in order to give them some legal capacities and advantages, particularly that of perpetuity, which in their natural persons they could not have had; as the sovereign, a bishop, parson, etc., Steph.
Desertion
of marriage which in law legalises the sexual relationship between man and woman in the society for the perpetuation of race, permitting lawful indulgence in passion to prevent licentiousness and for procreation of children, Savitri Pandey v.
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Perpetually - Law Dictionary Search Results
Exception
RESERVATION. Under s. 162(1)(d) of the (English) Law of Properties Act, 1925, the rule of law relating to perpetuities does not apply to any exception of any right of entry or user of the surface of land,
Esquire
Esquires may be divided into five classes: (I) The younger sons of peers and their eldest sons in perpetual succession. (II) The eldest sons of knights and their eldest sons in like successiorr. (III) The chiefs of
Eleemosynary corporations
Eleemosynary corporations, corporate bodies con-stituted for the perpetual distribution of the free alms or bounty of the founder of them. Of this kind are all hospitals
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Ecclesiastical Corporations
Ecclesiastical Corporations. Corporations created for the furtherance of religion, and for the perpetuation of the rights of the church, the members of which are exclusively spiritual persons. They are of two
Drunkenness
amended by the Inebriates Act, 1888 (51 & 52 Vict. C. 19), which made the Act of 1879 perpetual, and the (English) Inebriates Act, 1898 (61 & 62 Vict. c. 60). The Act of 1879 defines an
Natural allegiance
Natural allegiance, that perpetual attachment which is due from all natural-born subject to their sovereign; local allegiance is temporary only, being due
Physician
which incorporated the physicians. By 14 & 15 Hen. 8, c. 5, this charter was confirmed, and a perpetual college of physicians established with a constitution of eight elects, etc. The subsequent history of the college is
Office of profit
Durgah Endowment is to be appointed by the Government of India but it is a body corporate with perpetual succession acting within the four corners of the Act. Merely because the committee or the members of the
Sole, Corporation
who are incorporated by law, in order to give them some legal capacities and advantages, particularly that of perpetuity, which in their natural persons they could not have had; as the sovereign, a bishop, parson, etc., Steph.
Desertion
of marriage which in law legalises the sexual relationship between man and woman in the society for the perpetuation of race, permitting lawful indulgence in passion to prevent licentiousness and for procreation of children, Savitri Pandey v.
Try the research workspace - 7 days free