Statute de Donis Conditionalibus

Statute de Donis Conditionalibus
Same as Statute de Donis.

Ballentine's law dictionary. . 1998.

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  • De donis conditionalibus — is the chapter of the English Statutes of Westminster (1285)[1] which originated the law of entail. Strictly speaking, a form of entail was known before the Norman feudal law had been domesticated in England. The common form was a grant to the… …   Wikipedia

  • De Donis Conditionalibus — See Statute de Donis …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • de donis — /diy downas/ Concerning gifts (or more fully, de donis conditionalibus, concerning conditional gifts). The name of a celebrated English statute, passed in the thirteenth year of Edw. I, and constituting the first chapter of the statute of Westm.… …   Black's law dictionary

  • de donis — /diy downas/ Concerning gifts (or more fully, de donis conditionalibus, concerning conditional gifts). The name of a celebrated English statute, passed in the thirteenth year of Edw. I, and constituting the first chapter of the statute of Westm.… …   Black's law dictionary

  • History of English land law — Material here has been extracted from the 1911 Britannica encyclopedia. The history of English land law derives from a mixture of Roman, Norman and modern legislative sources.OutlineSuch terms as fee or homage carry us back into feudal times.… …   Wikipedia

  • property law — Introduction       principles, policies, and rules by which disputes over property are to be resolved and by which property transactions may be structured. What distinguishes property law from other kinds of law is that property law deals with… …   Universalium

  • Fee tail — Entail redirects here. For other uses, see Entail (disambiguation). Property law …   Wikipedia

  • conditional fee — A common law estate in land, otherwise known as a fee conditional or fee simple conditional, distinctive by reason of the limitation to particular heirs, exclusive of others, as a grant to a named person and the heirs of his body, or, in the case …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • Quia Emptores — (medieval Latin for because the buyers , the incipit of the document) was a statute passed by Edward I of England in 1290 that prevented tenants from alienating their lands to others by subinfeudation. Quia Emptores, along with its companion… …   Wikipedia

  • 1280s in England — Events from the 1280s in England.IncumbentsMonarch Edward I of EnglandEvents* 1280 ** University College, Oxford established. * 1281 * 1282 ** 21 March Dafydd ap Gruffydd leads rebellion in Wales. ** 11 December The English defeat the Welsh at… …   Wikipedia

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