Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Brown was both a feoffee and a lawyer for the Company.
In this case, Richard was called the "feoffee of uses".
Alice said she'd run out of feoffee, would Nescafe do.
Feoffee - "a party to whom a fee is conveyed"
They were avoided by conveyance to a feoffee to uses to the use of a religious order.
The term is more fully stated as a feoffee to uses of the beneficial owner.
He was feoffee of All Saints church and bailiff again in 1633.
This enabled the feoffee to uses for the benefit of a cestui que use.
The last recorded mention of him was as a feoffee to Richard Burley in 1387.
Land might also be vested in a feoffee to uses (i.e. trustee) or managed by an attorney.
The feoffee to uses was bypassed.
Before 1549, Thomas Bishopp senior had acted as feoffee to Elizabeth.
He served as a feoffee for Thomas Kiddell and as a justice of the peace.
This difficulty was overcome if the land was conveyed to a feoffee to uses to the use of the grantor's wife.
He was an executor of Henry's will and was a feoffee of lands in the will.
Later, it decided that not only was the conscience of the feoffee to uses bound by the use, but also the conscience of his heir.
She stared and waited and it was clear that she had no intention of enlightening me as to what a Feoffee actually was.
The common law did not recognise the cestui que use but affirmed the right of ownership by feoffee to use.
Evidently Lord Marrick is becoming the top Feoffee, whatever that involves, and wants to arrange some events to celebrate it.
Their son was educated at Blundell's School, Tiverton, and in 1765 was elected as a feoffee of that foundation.
The earliest appearance of cestui que in the medieval period was the feoffee to uses, which like the Salman, held on account of another.
A Feoffee is a trustee who holds a fief (or "fee"), that is to say an estate in land, for the use of a beneficial owner.
In 1870, there was a school in the village using run-down premises lent by Townsend's Feoffee, now the John Townsend charity.
In 2005, they released Feoffees' Lands, (a feoffee is a medieval term for a trustee) on GJS.