10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PLENARTY»
Discover the use of
plenarty in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
plenarty and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Digest of the Laws of England
Or adds another defendant. R. Hob. i 38. So he may plead in abatement darrtin
presentment. Vide Abatement, (H. 26.) (3 1. 8.) So he may plead plenarty, before
the writ purchased, of Plenaity. the presentment of the plaintiff himself. Th D. I. li.c.
Sir John Comyns, Stewart Kyd, 1793
(i) And now, since the statute of \Vestminster the second,(j) it must be a plenarty
for sir calendar months at the least prior to the writ of quare impedit;(l:) in which *
case the law will not #10 1 suffer the incumbent to be removed; but still the suit ...
3
A Treatise on the Law of Actions Relating to Real Property ...
(q) In case of an appropriation, it seems that a defendant cannot plead plenarty
without snowing in his plea the origin of the appropriation. (r) When it is said that
plenarty by the presentation of a stranger may be pleaded, it must be understood
...
4
The Law-dictionary: Explaining the Rise, Progress, and ...
PLEN ARTY, the abstract of the adjective plenun, and is used in Common Law in
matters of benefices, where a church is full of an incumbent; Plenarty and
vacation, or avoidance, being direct contraries. Staundf. Prxrog. c. 8./. 32: Stat.
Westm.
Sir Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, 1811
5
The Prince and the Rose: A Novel Based on the Life of Bir ...
PLENARTY, the abstract of the adjective filenus, and is used in Common Law in
matters of benefices, where a church is full of an incumbent; Plenarty and
vacation, or avoidance, being direct contraries. Staundf. Prierog. c. 8. f. 32: Stat.
Westm.
6
An Institute of the Laws of England: Or, The Laws of England ...
Cro.,54.. Temper! 'aecurrit Raging] l ._._-_. god but, b Institution by Six Months
before a Qzzare Impedit-broughfiz-'fiizska v tsnst.lt9.b. good Plenarty against a
Common Person or Subject 3; butflenaszty. is Zfithsi' 3' r not a Plea against the
King, ...
7
The Law-dictionary, Explaining the Rise Progress and Present ...
PLENARTY. The abstract of the adjective plenus, and is used in common law in
matters of benefices, where a church is full of an incumbent; plenarty and
vacation, or avoidance, being direct contraries. Staundf. P-nero . c. 8. f. 32; stat.
Westm.
Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, 1835
8
The Law-dictionary, Explaining the Rise, Progress, and ...
A clerk inducted may plead his patron's title, and being instituted by the space of
six months, his patron may plead plenarty against all common persons. Plowd.
501. Institution by six months, before a writ of quare impede! brought, is a good ...
Sir Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, Thomas Colpitts Granger, 1836
9
Law-dictionary Explaining the Rise, Progress and Present ...
See Forfeiture. PLENARTY, The abstract of the adjective plenus, and is used in
Common Law in matters of benefices, where a chnrch is full of an incumbent;
Plenarty and Vacation, or avoidance, being direct contraries. Staundf. Prwrog. c.
8. /.
Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, 1820
10
A Practical Arrangement of Ecclesiastical Law
5, it must be plenarty for six months; generally, plenarty is no plea against the
lung, 2 Inst. 361, nor plenarty upon a collation by a bishop by wrong, though the
collation was after a lapse. Com. Dig. Pleader,3 I. 3If the defendant plead
plenarty ...
Francis James Newman Rogers, 1849