Tenantable Repair - Law Dictionary Search Results
Annual value
Annual value, annual rent at which the building may be expected to let, D.G. Gouse & Co. (Agents) Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Kerala, (1980) 2 SCC 410: AIR 1980 SC 271 (280).Means, in relation to any land, the rent at which the land might reasonably be expected to let from year to year if the tenant undertook to pay all usual tenant's rates and taxes and to bear the costs of the repairs and insurance and the other expenses, if any, necessary to maintain the land in a State to command that rent, Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 19(2), 4th Edn., Para 1193, Note 3, p. 939....
Fire
Fire. No action for damages lies against any person in whose house, etc., a fire shall accidentally begin: Fires Prevention (Metropolis) Act, 1774 (14 Geo. 3, c. 78), s. 86, which s. and s. 83 are the only unrepealed sections of the Act.To discharge or dismiss a person from employment; to terminate as employee. Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn.Fire Engines.--The maintenance of fire engines in urban sanitary districts is provided for by the Public Health Act, 1875, s. 171, which incorporates ss. 30-33 of the (English) Town Police Clauses Act, 1847, in the (English) Metropolis by the Fire Brigade Act, 1865, and in parishes by the (English) Parish Fire Engines Act, 1898 (61 & 62 Vict. c. 38), and the Acts therein recited.By s. 90 of the (English) Public Health Amendment Act, 1907, local authorities can agree for the common use of fire engines and appliances; ss. 87-89 of the same Act give the police certain powers of breaking into premises and regulating traffic upon the out break of a fir...
Part-owners, or co-owners
Part-owners, or co-owners, joint owners, or tenants in common, who have a distinct, or at least an independent, although an undivided, interest in the property. If the property is in land, by the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 1 (6), a legal estate is not capable of subsisting or of being created in an undivided share in land and the beneficial interest in the property is merely equitable [ibid., sub-s. (3)] See, further, UNDIVIDED SHARES. Neither of them can transfer or dispose of the whole property, or act for the others as partners can in relation thereto; each can merely deal with his own share, and to the extent of his own several right and interest. It is an entirely different relation from partnership.Part-owners of ships are tenants in common, with distinct and undivided interest, and each is the agent of the others, as to the ordinary repairs, employment, and business of the ship, in the absence of any known dissent. The property in a ship, is by s. 5 of the (English)...
Haybote
An allowance of wood to a tenant for repairing his hedges or fences hedgebote See Bote...
Housebote
Wood allowed to a tenant for repairing the house and for fuel This latter is often called firebote See Bote...
Plowbote
Wood or timber allowed to a tenant for the repair of instruments of husbandry See Bote...
Land Commissioners
Land Commissioners, the title by the (English) Settled Land Act, 1882, s. 48, of the Commissioners formerly called 'The Copyhold Inclosure and Tithe Commissioners.' By s. 26 of that Act, a certificate of these Commissioners that an 'improvement' within that Act has been effected is, in the absence of an Order of the Court, an authority to trustees to pay for the improvement out of 'capital money,' and by s. 28 a tenant for life must maintain and repair an 'improvement' at his own expense during such period, if any, as the Commissioners by certificate in any case prescribe.All powers and duties of the Land Commissioners were transferred to the Board of Agriculture by the (English) Board of Agriculture Act, 1889 (52 & 53 Vict. c. 30)....
Rackrent
Rackrent, rent raised to the uttermost; the full annual benefit of the property; in the (English) Public Health Act, 1936, s. 334, in relation to any property, means a rent which is not less than two-thirds of the rent at which a house or other property might reasonably be expected to let from year to year, free from all usual tenant's rates and taxes and tithe rentcharge (if any), and deducting therefrom the probable average annual cost of the repairs, insurance and other expenses (if any) necessary to maintain the same in a state to command such rent.Rent equal to or nearly equal to full annual value of property: excessively or unreasonable high rent, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1266...
Plough-bote
Plough-bote, a tenant's right to take wood for the repairs of ploughs, carts, and harrows, and for making rakes, forks, etc....
Murorum operatio
Murorum operatio, the service of work and labour done by inhabitants and adjoining tenants in building or repairing the walls of a city or castle; their personal service was commuted into murage (q.v.)....
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