life tenant

  • 91Dominium — Dominium, a legal term meaning Dominion; control; ownership, forms several related compounds in legal Latin: dominium directum Direct ownership, that is control of the property, but not necessarily with right to its utilization or alienation. For …

    Wikipedia

  • 92innocent — Free from guilt; acting in good faith and without knowledge of incriminatory circumstances, or of defects or objections. See not guilty @ innocent agent In criminal law, one who, being ignorant of any unlawful intent on the part of his principal …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 93innocent — Free from guilt; acting in good faith and without knowledge of incriminatory circumstances, or of defects or objections. See not guilty @ innocent agent In criminal law, one who, being ignorant of any unlawful intent on the part of his principal …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 94consimili casu — A writ by which a reversioner might recover land from the alienee of a life tenant or tenant by the curtesy. See 3 Bl Comm 183, note …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 95enlargement of estate — Adding to an estate in property, thereby increasing the estate in importance and in value, as where the remainderman conveys or releases his interest to the life tenant or tenant for years …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 96dividend — A gain or profit. Hellmich v Hellman (CA8 Me) 18 F2d 239. A division into shares; one of such shares. A payment made by a corporation to its stockholders out of surplus earnings and under authority of a resolution by the board of directors which… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 97earnings — In a pristine sense, the gains of a person from his services or labor, without the aid of capital. 22 Am J2d Damg § 89; 31 Am J2d Exemp § 39. In the modern sense and development of the term, it includes profits from the employment of capital, as… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 98interest in possession — England, Wales Interest in possession (IIP) is a trust law principle that has UK taxation implications. A beneficiary of a trust has an IIP if they have the immediate right to receive the income arising from the trust property, or have the use… …

    Law dictionary

  • 99IIP — England, Wales Interest in possession (IIP) is a trust law principle that has UK taxation implications. A beneficiary of a trust has an IIP if they have the immediate right to receive the income arising from the trust property, or have the use… …

    Law dictionary

  • 100appointment (of all or part of a trust fund) — England, Wales The exercise of an express power (contained in a trust document and called a power of appointment) by the trustees of a trust, to direct (or redirect) the trust fund in favour …

    Law dictionary