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I am sure your hereditament is more than sufficient.
An example of a corporeal hereditament is land held in freehold.
If it occupies the neighbouring property as well, the two together are the hereditament.
Rateable occupation is occupying a hereditament so as to be liable to pay a rate.
In practice, determination of rateable occupation and hereditament is often interlinked.
It was held that the appellant's hereditament had been entered in the valuation list at the proper figure.
It is possible for a hereditament to be both non-domestic and domestic in different parts, for example a shop with living accommodation.
A rateable hereditament is a property which fulfills the requirements to render it subject to a rating assessment.
In case law, the concept of the hereditament is inextricably linked to that of rateable occupation.
The principle Denning stated shows that if a business occupies a single property, that is the hereditament.
A hereditament can include the right to exhibit advertisements on another's property (such as a commercial advertising hoarding), mines, and certain sporting rights.
Any hereditament that does not meet the criteria for domestic will be non-domestic (although it may then be exempt).
In law, a hereditament (from Lat.
It was held that the functional connection between the two properties was so great that they were to be treated as a single hereditament.
In the history of English common law, a jurisdiction could be held as a form of property (or more precisely an incorporeal hereditament) called a franchise.
Distinction between definition of "tenement" in Hong Kong and "hereditament" in UK was made.
Some items of plant and machinery within a hereditament are assumed to be included in the hereditament.
Each property ('hereditament') in England and Wales was surveyed and valued, so a land value tax could be levied when the property was sold.
Hereditament is a legal term for a unit of property, which often appears to be synonymous with simply "property", in the bricks and mortar sense of the word.
The concept of hereditament in rating law has developed along with that of rateable occupation through case law, as no single statute has defined it adequately.
A franchise, such as a corporation, a jurisdiction, or a right to collect certain tolls or taxes, was, in effect, a kind of property: an "incorporeal hereditament".
The Local Government Finance Act 1988 specifically retained the definition of hereditament from the General Rate Act 1967:
This itself does not directly provide a definition, but depends on the case law already established by prior forms of rating; no statutory definition of the hereditament exists.
If it occupies only the ground floor, that is the hereditament (and the first floor is a separate hereditament).
It goes on further to define a "hereditament" as "any real property which on an intestacy occurring before the commencement of this Act might have devolved upon an heir".