A Digest of the Laws of England Respecting Real Property, Volumes 3-4

Front Cover
Collins & Hannay, 1827 - Real property
 

Contents

Page
21
Warranty 430
22
Sale of the Presentation during a Vacancy
23
Consideration
28
Grant or Release
29
Rectors or Parsons 57
30
Hemp Flax
35
Prescription de modo decimandi 64
42
Agistment
46
And exclusion of the Half Blood
52
Gardens
59
Trust Estates are within
66
Act of Parliament
68
By Enfranchisement of Copyholds id
70
Long Possession of a Portion of Tithes creates a Title
72
TITLE XXV
78
How Offices may be granted 120
80
A Park 254
98
TITLE XXVI
99
Cases where Dignities have gone with Lands 163
108
Dignities by Writ 171
114
Are Hereditary 174
118
Bishops c may grant Offices
121
May be entailed 184
122
What Offices may be granted to two Persons
125
What Estate may be had in an Office
126
What Offices may be granted in Reversion
129
What Offices may be entailed
130
Married Woman id
131
When subject to Curtesy and Dower
132
CHAP III
136
Some Offices may be assigned id
138
Where only one Heir the Abeyance terminates 216
144
Cases of claims by a surviving Heir 223
148
Descent of Baronies created by Writs to the eldest 237
157
Is the same as that of the antient Barony 243
164
TITLE XXVII
166
A Forest 251
167
A Chace 253
168
Rights of the Lords as to Game 263
174
A Court Leet 266
176
Wreck 267
177
Estray 269
178
Treasure Trove 270
179
Fairs and Markets id
180
How Franchises may be claimed 274
182
TITLE XXVIII
185
Remedies for Recovery of Rents 298
197
Right of entry by way of Use 301
198
CHAP II
200
Rent Service 8 Rent Charge 282
201
Rent Seck 283
205
CHAP III
206
TITLE XXIX
216
Possession id
220
Nature of Descent 337
221
Who may be heirs 339
222
And Natural born subjects 340
224
As to the Clauses and Covenants
226
CHAP III
228
May be restrained by Circumstances
229
Where the Instrument is specified it must be adopted
235
A Power given generally may be executed by Deed or Will
236
Mode of
247
CHAP IV
270
A Right to a Remainder c descends to the Half Blood 415
272
An Act of Ownership operates as a seisin 418
274
CHAP V
276
Nature of 1822 id
278
Cannot be altered by Limitation id
281
Other Sorts of Rents id
284
What gives a Seisin of a Rent id
285
Out of what a Rent may be reserved 26 Upon what Conveyances and how 287
287
A Trust Estate does not escheat 443
290
Nor an Equity of Redemption 461
302
Entitled to a Term to attend id
303
TITLE XXXI
306
To what Persons
314
499
327
A Bond 115
332
Common of Pasture
2
CHAP XI
4
CHAP XXII
5
id
6
Subinfeudation
7
Page
12
CHAP II
13
An Appointment must be registered 542
14
By Male infants
22
Description of the Things granted
25
CHAP III
30
Livery of Seisin
43
Of what Things mixed Tithes are
48
What may be created or conveyed by Grant
49
Tenants in Dower and by the Curtesy 83
51
Extinguishment 101
74
Confirmation 103
75
CHAP VII
77
Assignment 111
80
Must be by Deed or Note in Writing 112
81
But may abridge or qualify and enlarge them
82
Appendant 83
83
Appurtenant 84
84
Because of Vicinage 86
86
In Gross 87
87
Stinted Commons id
88
Common of Turbary 89
89
Common of Piscary 90
90
Words of Limitation and Purchase Page
91
Common annexed to Copyholds id
92
Common may be apportioned id
93
ExceptionsLands in Cities 130 id
94
Rights of the Commoners 96
96
Approvement of Common 97
97
Inclosure of Commons 102
102
Who may convey by 144
103
Extinguishment of Common 104
104
Whether the Use results on it id
105
CHAP XII
107
Defeazance 113
113
CHAP XIII
120
Married Women 181
128
Who may be Appointees 185
131
CHAP XIV
134
How to be exercised 135
135
Qualifications required 138
138
Statute against Selling or Buying Offices 139
139
gain and Sale 141
141
312
149
5 As to the Rent to be reserved 220
154
How to be reserved 225
157
What is the best Rent 226
158
But they must be properly executed 238
161
A Power may be executed by several Assurances 244
171
And at different Times 245
176
A Power cannot be delegated to another 256
178
Effects of the Execution of a Power 264
184
With a Remainder over 186
186
CHAP XVIII
195
313
196
CHAP XIX
202
Where the Grantee has an Election how to take 301
208
314
217
317
219
319
220
324
221
328
226
329
227
331
228
332
229
CHAP XXI
231
Distinction between Heirs of the Body and upon or on the Body
236
Effect of a Limitation to the Heirs of the Body of
237
Usual Mode of limiting Estates Tail
238
What Words create an Estate for Life
240
Origin and Nature of the Rule 369
254
What Words create an Estate for Years or at will 46 What Words create a Joint Tenancy
257
And be of the same Nature 379
260
The Rule not extended to the Words Son Child c id
261
Nor to Marriage Articles id
272
But is now applied 400
274
But not for Volunteers 276
276
What Words create a Tenancy in Common 61 What Words create Gross Remainders 67 Cases of Marriage Articles
283
CHAP XXIV
291
At what time payable 294
294
ConditionBy what Words created id
297
Only binds the Heir where he has Assets 436
299
Does not extend to collateral Warranty id
301
No Averments admitted against Deeds 303
303
CHAP XXV
304
But admitted in support of them 305
305
And where there is an Ambiguity 306
306
And where there is Fraud or Mistake 307
307
Where a Deed operates as an Estoppel id
308
Of Declarations of Trust 310
310
Of Articles of Agreement 311
311
For further Assurance 464
316
Are now usually restrained 466
317
According to the Title of the Vendor 468
322
CHAP XXVI
336
CHAP XXVII
352
5th CanonCollateral Descents
356
The Heir must be descended from the first Purchaser id
358
What Acts will alter the Descent
359
What Acts have not that effect
363
Rule of Collateral Descents
364
Registering is not Notice 544
368
The Notice must be fully proved 556
380
tility of the Register Acts 558
381
Register of Annuities 559
382

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Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 31 - ... or upon any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof; unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith...
Page 107 - All declarations or creations of trusts or confidences, of any lands, tenements, or hereditaments, shall be manifested and proved by some writing signed by the party who is by law enabled to declare such trusts, or by his last will in writing, or else they shall be utterly void and of none effect.
Page 260 - ... and for default of such issue to the princess Anne of Denmark, and the heirs of her body ; and for default of such issue to the heirs of the body of the said Prince of Orange.
Page 265 - RG, were parties, and by a recovery suffered in pursuance thereof, the estates were limited to the use of the husband for life, remainder to the wife...
Page 2 - Co. of the said district, have deposited in this office the title of a book, the right whereof they claim as proprietors, in the words following, to wit : " Tadeuskund, the Last King of the Lenape. An Historical Tale." In conformity to the Act of the Congress of the United States...
Page 207 - ... when the party by his own contract creates a duty or charge upon himself he is bound to make it good, if he may, notwithstanding any accident by inevitable necessity, because he might have provided against it by his contract.
Page 280 - Graves, for life ; remainder to his first and other sons in tail male ; remainder to the...
Page 279 - C., for life ; remainder to trustees to preserve contingent remainders ; remainder to the first and other sons of the said Lord C.
Page 78 - Offices, which are a right to exercise a public or private employment, and to take the fees and emoluments thereunto belonging, are also incorporeal hereditaments, whether public, as those of magistrates, or private, as of bailiffs, receivers, and the like.
Page 98 - ... covenanted to stand seised, to the use of himself for life, remainder to the use of his wife for life, remainder to the use of his daughter for life, remainder to her first and other sons in tail, reversion to his own right heirs.

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