10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «RENTALLER»
Discover the use of
rentaller in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
rentaller and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Treatise on the Law of Landlord and Tenant: With an ...
An indefinite rental, mentioning no duration, and bearing only that the person in
whose favour it was granted should be received as kindly tenant to the setter and
his heirs, was found to endure for the joint lives of the setter and the rentaller, ...
Robert Hunter, William Guthrie, 1876
2
The Scottish Jurist: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in ...
11 of process, it appears that Janet Wilson is simply a rentaller, or kindly tenant.
Formerly, if no period of endurance was expressed in the rental right, a proper
right of liferent was held thereby to be created in favour of the tenant (Ersk. b. ii. tit
.
3
The Institutions of the Law of Scotland, Deduced from Its ...
The like where the rentaller had given a disposition of the rental, whereupon the
acquirer was in possession, which was found to annul the rental, albeit it bore
assignees, and to exclude a subtack by the rentaller to that same party, granted ...
4
The principles of the law of Scotland, in the order of Sir ...
If the rental was not delivered in writing to the rentaller, it could not operate
against the landlord's singular successors ; but an enrolment of the tenant as a
rentaller, in the landlord's rental book, was effectual against the landlord himself,
and ...
John Erskine, Sir George Mackenzie, 1809
5
Principles of the Law of Scotland
A rentaller who assigns forfeits his rental. How long rentals endure. Obligation
upon the setter in tacks of land; r&9) or rentallers ; and at their entry they paid a
certain sum as a present to the landlord for their right, more or less, according to
the ...
John Erskine, William Guthrie, 1870
6
The decisions of the Court of Session: from its first ...
... by law, endures only for the setter's and receiver's lifetime canjunctim, was yet
found to belong to the first heir of the rentaller, upon his proving, by sentences in
for.o contradictorTM, or by oath of party, that such was the custom of the burgh.
Scotland. Court of Session, William Maxwell Morison, 1811
7
An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the ...
Where a rental was granted to the rentaller and his heirs, the term of endurance
was, by our older practice, the same as if no heirs had been expressed ; said July
5. 1625, Alton, (Dict. p. 7191.); but afterwards, more agreeably both to the ...
John Erskine, James Ivory, 1824
8
A Dictionary and Digest of the Law of Scotland: With Short ...
KINDLY TENANT; or Rentaller. A rental right, (which is now almost unknown in
practice,) was a lease granted by the landlord for a low and favourable tack-duty,
to those who were either presumed to be lineal descendants of the ancient ...
9
An Institute of the Law of Scotland
Where a rental was granted to the rentaller and his heirs, the term of endurance
was, by our older practice, the same as if no heirs had been expressed ; said July
5. 1625, Alton, (Dict. p. 7191.) ; but afterwards, more agreeably both to the ...
John Erskine (Juriste), 1824
10
Erskine's Principles of the Law of Scotland
These tacksmen had the name of kindly tenants or rentallers ; and at their entry
they paid a certain sum as a present to the landlord for their right, more or less,
according to the custom rental was not delivered in writing to the rentaller, it could
...