| John Chipman Gray - 1906 - 724 σελίδες
...Twisden's language in Love v. Wyndham,z and says : " By this expression he must be understood to mean any number of lives the extinction of which could be proved without difficulty. " 3 And again : " But it is asked, shall lands be rendered unalienable during the lives of all the... | |
| John Chipman Gray - 1908 - 740 σελίδες
...one after another, if all be in existence at once. By this expression he must be understood to mean any number of lives, the extinction of which could...trusts came to be examined by the great powers of Lord Nettingham as to the time, within which the contingency must happen, he thus expresses himself: " If... | |
| 1909 - 474 σελίδες
...one after another, if all be in existence at once. By this expression, he must be understood to mean any number of lives, the extinction of which could...executory trusts came to be examined by the great powers ot Lord Nottingham as to the time within which the contingency must happen, he thus expresses himself:... | |
| John Chipman Gray - 1915 - 770 σελίδες
...Twisden, J., in Love v. Wynd- • ham,* and says: "By this expression he must be understood to mean any number of lives the extinction of which could be proved without difficulty."6 And again: "But it is asked, shall lands be rendered unalienable during the lives of... | |
| Albert Martin Kales - 1917 - 1496 σελίδες
...by these rules has this court always governed itself : but one step more there is in this case. 7. If a term be devised, or the trust of a term limited...remainders for life, successively, and all the persons in esse, and alive at the time of the limitation of their estates, these though they look like a possibility... | |
| 1928 - 700 σελίδες
...p. 13-1) : " By this expression he " — that is, an earlier judge — " must be understood to mean any number of lives, the extinction of which could be proved without difficulty." On p. 135 he said : " In ficuttergood \. Edge (1 Salk. 229) the court held that an executory estate,... | |
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