| Edmund Hatch Bennett, Chauncey Smith - 1853 - 680 pàgines
...company from persons under disability, and, with the exception i,t' a small surplus, has been afterwards laid out in the purchase of lands to be settled to the same uses, if snch surplus is under 20/. the court will allow it to be paid to the tenant for life,... | |
| 1854 - 570 pàgines
...money, some of which were charged on the Norfolk estates, and any surplus of the proceeds of the sale was to be laid out in the purchase of lands, to be settled to the same uses as the Norfolk estates ; and the rents and profits of the Dorset estates, until sold, were... | |
| Francis Williams Sanders - 1855 - 622 pàgines
...directed, that the surplus of the rents and profits should, during the life of the earl (the annuitant) be laid out in the purchase of lands, to be settled to such uses as the c. 36. makes void not merely a charitable trust, but the estate clothed with it; though,... | |
| Owen Davies Tudor - 1856 - 942 pàgines
...right to determine it The point which arises between them is this, the personal estate is directed to be laid out in the purchase of lands, to be settled to certain uses, which we hold to be illegal. The purpose and object the testator had in view is not,... | |
| Chauncey Smith - 1859 - 942 pàgines
...company from persons CE der disability, and, with the exception of a small surplus, has been afterwards laid out in the purchase of lands to be settled to the same uses, if such surplus is under i-<l. the court will allow it to be paid to the tenant for life,... | |
| Edward Burtenshaw Sugden - 1861 - 1034 pàgines
...execution of the power vest in a purchaser, unless it had subsequently happened that the purchase-money was laid out in the purchase of lands to be settled to the uses of the lands sold. 49. These cases should not be dismissed without an observation on the impolicy of... | |
| John M'Laren - 1863 - 604 pàgines
...was introduced. By parity of reasoning, it has been held in England, that where money is directed to be laid out in the purchase of lands to be settled to uses which do not exhaust the estate, the surplus proceeds result to the next of kin (although, if... | |
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