Sally Lunn - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: sally lunnSally Lunn
A tea cake slighty sweetened and raised with yeast baked in the form of biscuits or in a thin loaf and eaten hot with butter...
Sally
To leap or rush out to burst forth to issue suddenly as a body of troops from a fortified place to attack besiegers to make a sally...
Contravallation
A trench guarded with a parapet constructed by besiegers to secure themselves and check sallies of the besieged...
Coupure
A passage cut through the glacis to facilitate sallies by the besieged...
Excursion
A running or going out or forth an expedition a sally...
Extravagance
A wandering beyond proper limits an excursion or sally from the usual way course or limit...
Klicket
A small postern or gate in a palisade for the passage of sallying parties...
Revocation of Will
Revocation of Will. There are four modes in which a will can be revoked, viz.: (1) by another will or express declaration in, or by intention to be inferred from another properly executed testamentary instrument; (2) by burning or other act done animo revocandi; (3) by the disposition of the property by the testator in his lifetime; (4) by marriage, except in certain cases of testamentary appointment. By the first and third of these modes, the will may be revoked either entirely or partially; by the second and last, the revocation will be total, unless under the provisions of the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 177, the will has been made in contemplation of a particular marriage, Sallis v. Jones, 1936 P. 43....
Wills
Wills. A will is the valid disposition by a living person, to take effect after his death, of his disposable property. ''But in law ultima voluntas in scriptis is used, where lands or tenements are devised, and testamentum, when it concerneth chattels': Co. Litt. 111 a.Depository of Will of Living Person.-By the (English) Jud. Act, 1925, s. 172, replacing s. 91 of the Court of Probate Act, 1857:-There shall, under the control and direction of the High Court, be provided safe and convenient depositories for the custody of the wills of living persons, and any person may deposit his will therein.And see (English) Administration of Justice Act, 1928 (18 & 19 Geo. 5, c. 26), s. 11, as to deposit of wills under control of the High Court.Law before 1838.-The right of testamentary aliena-tion of lands is a matter depending on Act of Parliament. Before 32 Hen. 8, c. 1, a will could not be made of land, and before the Statute of Frauds a will (see NUNCUPATIVE WILL) could be made by word of mouth...
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