A Concise Practical Treatise on the Law of PropertyH. Sweet, 1882 - 609 pages |
From inside the book
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Page vi
... condition of the law of this country will not be out of place here . Our law has not kept pace with our civilization . In the latter there has been ( as in the civilization of every vii intelligent nation there must be ) a progressive ...
... condition of the law of this country will not be out of place here . Our law has not kept pace with our civilization . In the latter there has been ( as in the civilization of every vii intelligent nation there must be ) a progressive ...
Page xii
... Condition of sale entitling vendor to interest Secondly : -It transfers right to Purchase - money and property . conditionally on proof of title Thirdly - It entitles to intermediate Income and Interest 84 85 86 86 87 Time for paying ...
... Condition of sale entitling vendor to interest Secondly : -It transfers right to Purchase - money and property . conditionally on proof of title Thirdly - It entitles to intermediate Income and Interest 84 85 86 86 87 Time for paying ...
Page xvii
... Conditions of Rule .. 171 Exceptions 173 Transferee of estate with which covenant runs must perform it specifically 173 Rule 173 Conditions of Rule .. 174 Exceptions 175 When Assignment relieves original promissor .. 175 Who is liable ...
... Conditions of Rule .. 171 Exceptions 173 Transferee of estate with which covenant runs must perform it specifically 173 Rule 173 Conditions of Rule .. 174 Exceptions 175 When Assignment relieves original promissor .. 175 Who is liable ...
Page xix
... Condition .. 207 207 208 Prodigality 208 Rule 208 ( Attempts to restrict the rule ) 209 Conditions of the rule 210 Prodigality presumed from harshness , and from ... Condition .. Condition subsequent 214 TABLE OF CONTENTS . xix .
... Condition .. 207 207 208 Prodigality 208 Rule 208 ( Attempts to restrict the rule ) 209 Conditions of the rule 210 Prodigality presumed from harshness , and from ... Condition .. Condition subsequent 214 TABLE OF CONTENTS . xix .
Page xx
Hugh William Boyd Mackay. Page Limitation other than a Condition .. Condition subsequent 214 215 ( How a condition subsequent may be taken advantage of ) 215 Limitation over of a chattel : when void 215 ( Proposed extension of the rule ...
Hugh William Boyd Mackay. Page Limitation other than a Condition .. Condition subsequent 214 215 ( How a condition subsequent may be taken advantage of ) 215 Limitation over of a chattel : when void 215 ( Proposed extension of the rule ...
Contents
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Other editions - View all
A Concise Practical Treatise on the Law of Property (Classic Reprint) Hugh William Boyd Mackay No preview available - 2018 |
A Concise Practical Treatise on the Law of Property H. W. Boyd B. 1843 MacKay No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
acquired afterwards Ante apply assignment authorized Bankruptcy beneficial estate beneficial interest benefit binding breach CHAPTER chattel interest chose in action circumstances cited claims clause condition conferred consideration contract conveyance copyhold Court covenant creditor damages death debt deed devolution disponee disponor dispose doctrine easement effect entitled estate tail executor exonerate Fearne feoffment fiduciary fraud gift Hare heirs held hereditament husband implied incumbrance intention invalidate L. J. Ch land latter lease legal estate liable lien limitation Litt Lord marriage ment merely mortgage necessary notice owner party performance perpetuity period possession principle priority promise promisor question Reese River registered representation rule Rule against Perpetuities seems settlement Smith specifically enforcible specified statute stipulation sufficient Sugd tenement testamentary disposition third person transfer unless valid agt vendor vested void voidable
Popular passages
Page 495 - Upon, and that it is acted upon accordingly ; and if, whatever a man's real intention may be, he so conducts himself that a reasonable man would take the representation to be true, and believe that it was meant that he should act upon it, and did act upon it as true, the party making the representation would be equally precluded from contesting its truth...
Page xxi - Court under its seal, shall for all purposes be conclusive evidence that every application, proceeding, consent, and act whatsoever which ought to have been made, given, and done previously to the execution of such conveyance, assignment, or declaration, or the making of such order respectively, has been made, given, and done by the persons authorized to make, give, and do the same...
Page xviii - ... against the lands of his debtor, legal or equitable. The statute has no exception of equitable rights : but then it is said that equity puts parties who have notice of unregistered judgments or incumbrances, in the same position as if they had been registered. This is stating the proposition too broadly. All that equity has done is this : where a purchaser has paid his money to a vendor, with notice of an unregistered judgment against that vendor, there this Court has held that such a purchaser...
Page 68 - ... be considered as a feme sole with respect to property of every description which she may acquire or which may come to or devolve upon her...
Page xix - ... would not raise a lien upon the land, and the present plaintiffs might have been relieved if they had filed their bill against him in his lifetime, that is, after his title had accrued, yet it does not follow that, therefore, they can • be relieved against his heirs. Neither the land itself, nor the conscience of the present i^fendants is bound by this act of William, the surrenderor.
Page xviii - ... himself behind the Registry Acts, which were made to protect parties against charges of which they had no notice, and not against those which were known to them. Whether that was, originally, a line of decision conformable to the scope and policy of the Registry Acts in general, I need not inquire. But the equity so enforced is merely a personal equity, arising out of the character of vendor and purchaser ; an equity affecting the conscience of a party paying money with notice : and the doctrine...
Page xviii - Vez., 419. The decision was that these] judgment-creditors had no right to redeem the mortgagee, because they had no incumbrance on the land. The common cases, to the effect that an expectancy may be the subject of contract, establish the same principle to a certain extent. A learned * writer observes — " Contracts made by a person before the devolution of the estate or other realisation of his expectancy, are, it seems, purely personal, and only capable of being enforced against the contractor...
Page 141 - So is a moral consideration, if founded upon a previous legal consideration ; as, where one promises to pay a debt barred by the statute of limitations, or by infancy. But a merely moral consideration, as one founded upon natural love and affection, or the relation of parent and child, is no legal consideration.
Page xiv - ... fee. In these cases the Court did in effect give to the injured party pecuniary damages for the...
Page 23 - ... shall extend to manors, messuages, and all other corporeal hereditaments whatsoever, and also to tithes (other than tithes belonging to a spiritual or eleemosynary corporation sole), and also to any share, estate, or interest in them or any of them, whether the same shall be a freehold or chattel interest, and whether freehold or copyhold, or held according to any other tenure; and the word "rent...