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Another form of wife selling was by deed of conveyance.
The deed of conveyance of the land was executed on 21st January.
Largely independent from this cadastral development, local courts recorded deeds of conveyance.
Grant - transfer of property by deed of conveyance.
The main clauses of a deed of conveyance are:
In 1597, the earl executed a deed of conveyance in his favour for the lands (when Piers had reached maturity).
The deed of conveyance of the property was executed at London on the eleventh of March, 1995.
The terms of the Deed of Conveyance include the stipulation that the donated land be used for supervised public educational access, not for private use.
The lands sold on these petitions were conveyed to the purchasers by means of upwards of eight thousand deeds of conveyance.
They claimed possession of the land via a deed of conveyance from Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick.
The only difference between the two acts is that the 1853 act clearly defines how the Trustees must compose a deed of conveyance for the sale of real estate.
It was built in 1680 for Josiah Hobart, a prominent early settler, named in the first formal deed of conveyance of East Hampton.
In pursuant to this compulsion he adopted the two brothers as his sons and installed them the true inheritors of the above property bu one deed of conveyance.
Henri Gross believes that Kalonymus is identical with "Clarimoscus filius Tauroscii," mentioned in a deed of conveyance of 1195 reproduced by Gustave Saige.
The final deed of conveyance specified among other conditions that the building must be used "exclusively for the city library," and that it "shall not be open for public use on the Lord's Day."
Sale was the delivery of a purchase (in the case of real estate, symbolized by a staff, a key, or deed of conveyance) in return for purchase money, receipts being given for both.
But without such a review, the Administration will have no way of knowing what conditions to attach to any deed of conveyance when the base is finally transferred to Dade County, or what safeguards to require.
The action was brought in that court on a covenant of warranty of title to two pieces of land in a deed of conveyance made by the Kansas Pacific Railroad Company to Dunmeyer.
But according to the deeds of conveyance it must always be used as an open space and place of public recreation and must be preserved and maintained, so far as possible, in its present wild and natural condition.
Valentine, realizing the ruin entailed by the signature of the bond, tries to move his father by submission, and fails; then pretends to be mad and unable to sign the final deed of conveyance to his brother.
Words to that effect may be used by the parties in the deed of conveyance or other instrument of transfer of title, or by a testator in a will, or in an inter vivos trust deed.
Transfers of property were originally by symbolic delivery, by handing over a clump of ground or a stone or similar object on the property itself, and then registering the "deed of conveyance" in the local "Register of Sasines".
In compliance with the rules laid down by Sir Hans Sloane's original deed of conveyance (see p. 22), dried and labelled specimens of fifty species grown in the Garden had to be sent each year to the Royal Society.
England and Wales departed from this trend, as prolonged debates during the nineteenth century left parties with optional public recording of deeds of conveyance and the locating of properties and their boundaries on large-scale topographic maps, where available, similar to the metes and bounds method.
That he approved and valued the thirty-nine articles is certain because a stipulation was inserted in the deed of conveyance of the ground on which the Risley Chapel stood, namely "that the Minister of the Chapel shall subscribe to the Thirty-Nine Articles".