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Перевод: grantee
[существительное] получающий в дар
Тезаурус:
- It is well settled that such a grant or demise will impliedly confer on the grantee or lessee easements over the land retained corresponding to the continuous or apparent quasi-easements enjoyed at the time of the grant or demise by the property granted or demised over the property retained
- If they went to the common law courts, they would be told that the legal estate in the land was vested in the grantee, and that he was entitled to the benefit himself.
- If on the other hand residential accommodation is granted for a term at a rent with exclusive possession, the landlord providing neither attendance nor services, the grant is a tenancy; any express reservation to the landlord of limited rights to enter and view the state of the premises and to repair and maintain the premises only serves to emphasise the fact that the grantee is entitled to exclusive possession and is a tenant.
- By doing this, the Chancellor was beginning to recognise the rights of the family against the grantee as something more than personal.
- The information requirements from the grantee to the grantor are therefore as previously outlined.
- But if the grantor died in the Crusades, was there any way in which his family could prevent the grantee from taking the benefit for himself?
- When the charter to Maryland sought by George Calvert passed the Great Seal on 20 June 1632 Cecil Calvert was named the grantee, since his father had died earlier in the year.
- Nor does he render a service in country B or anywhere else by refraining in consequence of the grant from taking preventive action against the grantee.
- When petitions from such families found their way into the Chancery with some frequency, the Chancellor came to recognise that the conscience of the grantee was bound
- The grantee was morally a custodian of the land, and not entitled to use it for his own purposes.
- So the tenant transferred the estate but did not intend to allow the grantee to benefit from the land personally.
- The service, Mr. Park argued, could either consist in the grant of a sub-licence which enabled the operator to do in Vancouver what he could not otherwise lawfully do or could consist in the refraining by the taxpayer from stopping the grantee doing what he could otherwise be stopped from doing.
- Further research revealed that the grantee's father had called himself Mangnall .
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