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tenancy and was
His tenancy was precarious.
They played home games from their inaugural season to the 2011 season at Sun Life Stadium, which they shared with the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League ( NFL ) and which was also called Joe Robbie Stadium, Pro Player Park, Pro Player Stadium, Dolphin Stadium, Dolphins Stadium, and Land Shark Stadium during their tenancy.
He in turn granted the tenancy of Kensington to his vassal Aubrey de Vere I, who was holding the manor in 1086, according to Domesday Book.
It was found by a jury of grand assizes that his ancestors held this land in tenancy from the abbot and convent at a rent of twelve pound per annum.
Tibet is described by Melvyn Goldstein to have had serfdom until 1959, but whether or not the Tibetan form of peasant tenancy qualified as serfdom was widespread is contested.
Land held by serf tenure ( unless enfranchised ) continued to be held by what was thenceforth known as a copyhold tenancy, which was not completely abolished until 1925 ( although it was whittled away during the 19th and early 20th centuries ).
A secondary effect of the prohibition of sub-division was that other sons, who previously inherited part of the family farm tenancy, instead was forced to seek employment elsewhere.
His family bought him the tenancy of a country restaurant, a role in which he was quite successful, but this arrangement ended after the owner paid a visit one evening to find Mesrine carousing with acquaintances from his past.
Wilding's tenancy was actually much longer than Essanay's.
Another legal provision for widowhood was jointure, in which property, often land, would be held in joint tenancy, so that it would automatically go to the widow on her husband's death.
When they closed down, the upkeep of the elephant was written into the tenancy contract, so subsequent businesses have continued to look after it.
When feudal land tenure was abolished all fiefs became " simple ", without conditions attached to the tenancy.
While in later years the character of Janet remained, Somers was fired and other characters replaced her tenancy, including Chrissy's cousin, Cindy ( Jenilee Harrison ), and unrelated roommate Terri Alden ( Priscilla Barnes ).
During this period he was instrumental in abolishing " Land-Birta-System " and set strategies to promote land reform by onsolidating tenancy rights of the tenants.
In 1839 Lachlan was forced to relinquish his tenancy of Rum, bankrupt, penniless and, in the words of a Cape Breton letter from 1897, " much worse off than the comfortable people he turned out of Rum 13 years previously ".
Among the charges was that he had claimed rent on a flat in Westminster which he in fact owned, using a fake tenancy agreement.
These factors made sharecroppers dependent on the plantation owners in a way that perpetuated some of the aspects of slavery, and in the late 19th century maintained a stable, low-cost work force that replaced slave labor ; it was the bottom rung in the Southern tenancy ladder.
The theory of share tenancy was long dominated by Alfred Marshall's famous footnote in Book VI, Chapter X. 14 of Principles where he illustrated the inefficiency of agricultural share-contracting.
The Cricket Club served notice to quit at the same time, and so in 1943 the tenancy was officially ended.
With the exception of the years 1991 – 1994, when her party was in opposition, she continued to hold that office until she resigned in 2000 over a controversy in which she was criticised, as a private individual, for trying to convert her tenancy into a condominium, circumventing a controversial housing tenure law that she was responsible for introducing and advocating in her public role as Minister of Justice.

tenancy and held
The Popery Act ( Penal Law ) of 1704 required land held ( typically in tenancy ) by Roman Catholics to be divided equally between all the sons, both legitimate and illegitimate, on his death.
It could be held in capite from the king or as a mesne tenancy from a tenant-in-chief.
For example, if property is held in a tenancy by the entirety by a husband and wife, who then get divorced, the property is converted ipso jure ( i. e. by the law itself ) into another form of tenancy, usually a tenancy in common, at the very instant the marriage is dissolved.
Magno le Breton who held the manor under a tenancy to one Helgist would have valued the hilltop area for its summer pasture supported by reliable springs feeding ponds.
For example, if a family is allocated an apartment that is state owned, it will have been granted a tenancy of the apartment, which may be lifelong or inheritable, but the management and control rights are held by various government departments.
The tenancy is now held by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds ; and the land is managed to maintain the natural habitat.
Hugh Nonant — one of Longchamp's opponents — declared that the elder Longchamp was the son of a peasant, which seems unlikely, as Hugh de Longchamp appears to have held a knight's tenancy in Normandy.
A vavasour was the vassal or tenant of a baron, one who held their tenancy under a baron, and who also had tenants under him.
Assets that pass to somebody else by operation of law ( for example, property held on a joint tenancy basis ), do not form part of the deceased estate, even though the person had rights to that property during his or her lifetime.
A leasehold thus differs from a freehold or fee simple where the ownership of a property is purchased outright and thereafter held for an indeterminate length of time, and also differs from a tenancy where a property is let ( rented ) on a periodic basis such as weekly or monthly.
The All India Conference of Kisan Sabha, held at Kannur in 1953, resolved to initiate struggles for new tenancy legislations.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist, writing for a unanimous Court ( with Justice Stephen Breyer having recused himself ), held that " the plain language of statute requires leases that grant public housing authorities the discretion to terminate tenancy without regard to the tenant ’ s knowledge of the drug-related criminal activity.
If the estate is not automatically devised to the surviving spouse in this manner or through a joint tenancy, and is not held within a trust, it is necessary to " probate the estate ", whether or not the decedent had a valid will.
The Bissett family held the tenancy of the peninsula in Elizabeth I's reign, their rent being an annual offering of goshawks, birds which bred on the rugged white chalk cliffs nearby.
There is an explicit reference to Hedge End in a Court Baron held at Botley Manor on 19 May 1735, concerning the tenancy of a cottage and garden at Hedge End.
At March 2002 there were 17, 721 crofts, and 12, 000 to 13, 000 crofters ( some crofters have the tenancy of more than one croft or there is croft absenteeism where tenancies are held but crofts are not farmed ).
The assets of a joint commercial partnership might be held as a tenancy in common.
However, Carrefour had pulled out of the store within two years and it was taken over by Gateway Foodmarkets, whose tenure of the store was similarly short ; by 1990 they had withdrawn from the store and it was taken over by Asda, who have held the store's tenancy ever since.

tenancy and by
It should also be recognized that the problem of rural tenancy cannot be solved by administrative decrees alone.
In France, serfdom had been in decline for at least three centuries by the start of the Revolution, replaced by various forms of freehold tenancy.
When confronted by Michael Crick of Channel 4 News, Mates has repeatedly refused to answer questions about a windfall he received having vacated a sitting tenancy at Dolphin Square, London, when an MP ..
Joseph Stiglitz ( 1974, 1988 ), suggested that if share tenancy is only a labor contract, then it is only pairwise-efficient and that land-to-the-tiller reform would improve social efficiency by removing the necessity for labor contracts in the first place.
#* tenancy by entirety

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