dispose of property

  • 21dispose — To arrange; to put in place. To alienate, sell, or transfer. United States v Hacker (DC Cal) 73 F 292, 294; Hubbell v Hubbell, 135 Iowa 637, 113 N W 512. To grant; to convey, even by way of barter or exchange. Phelps v Harris (US) 11 Otto 370,… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 22receiving stolen property — receiving stolen goods or property Criminal offense of receiving any property with the knowledge that it has been feloniously, or unlawfully stolen, taken, extorted, obtained, embezzled, or disposed of. Receiving stolen property a statutory crime …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 23receiving stolen goods or property — Criminal offense of receiving any property with the knowledge that it has been feloniously, or unlawfully stolen, taken, extorted, obtained, embezzled, or disposed of. Receiving stolen property a statutory crime separate from the crime involved… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 24Land and Property Laws in Israel — refers to the legal framework governing land and property issues in Israel. Following its establishment, Israel designed a system of law that legitimized both a continuation and a consolidation of the nationalisation of land and property, a… …

    Wikipedia

  • 25Israeli land and property laws — Land and property laws in Israel provide a legal framework which governs land and property issues in Israel. At its establishment, Israel continued to apply the pre existing Ottoman and British land law. Over time, these laws were amended or… …

    Wikipedia

  • 26Married Women's Property Act 1882 — Parliament of the United Kingdom Long title An act to consolidate and amend the law relating to the property of married women. Statute book chapter …

    Wikipedia

  • 27Receipt of stolen property — is a type of crime in the legal code of the United States. It is a federal crime under UnitedStatesCode|18|2315 to knowingly receive, conceal, or dispose of stolen property with a value at least $5,000 that is part of interstate commerce (i.e.,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 28literary property — The right which entitles an author and his assigns to all the use and profit of his composition, to which no independent right is, through any act or omission on his or their part, vested in another person. The exclusive right of owner to possess …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 29literary property — The right which entitles an author and his assigns to all the use and profit of his composition, to which no independent right is, through any act or omission on his or their part, vested in another person. The exclusive right of owner to possess …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 30Legal history of wills — Wills in the Ancient WorldThe will, if not purely Roman in origin, at least owes to Roman law its complete development, a development which in most European countries was greatly aided at a later period by ecclesiastics versed in Roman law. In… …

    Wikipedia