An Essay on the History and Effects of the Laws of Mortmain: And the Laws Against Testamentary Dispositions for Pious Purposes: Comprising an Account of the Debates in Parliament, and of the Inquiries of Select Committees of the House of Commons, and the Most Interesting Cases which Have Occurred in Courts of Law. With an Appendix, Containing the Reports of the Select Committees, and Digests of the Evidence, Etc., EtcC. Dolman, 1853 - 268 pages |
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Page vi
... whole of his property on certain trusts , the general object being to complete and increase the charity school in Wapping , where he had been educated as an orphan . ) Although , however , he had no heirs or next of kin that he knew of ...
... whole of his property on certain trusts , the general object being to complete and increase the charity school in Wapping , where he had been educated as an orphan . ) Although , however , he had no heirs or next of kin that he knew of ...
Page 11
... whole of history to refute the calumnies of the enemies of religion . Besides the numerous religious motives which brought property into the hands of the monks , there is another very legitimate one , which has always been regarded as ...
... whole of history to refute the calumnies of the enemies of religion . Besides the numerous religious motives which brought property into the hands of the monks , there is another very legitimate one , which has always been regarded as ...
Page 16
... whole community of monks . And in another monastery there used to be more than a hundred tables laid out in one day . So in the monastery of Durham there was a house of hospitality called the Guest Hall , in which entertain- ment was ...
... whole community of monks . And in another monastery there used to be more than a hundred tables laid out in one day . So in the monastery of Durham there was a house of hospitality called the Guest Hall , in which entertain- ment was ...
Page 23
... whole refers to the first part , of which the gist is , " ita quod illam resumat de eadem domo tenendam ” . * The chief source of the wealth of monasteries was precaries - grants of land , the use of which the recipient reserved to ...
... whole refers to the first part , of which the gist is , " ita quod illam resumat de eadem domo tenendam ” . * The chief source of the wealth of monasteries was precaries - grants of land , the use of which the recipient reserved to ...
Page 25
... whole purview of these sta- tutes was , not the preventing of land from being alienated to religious houses , but the preservation of the feudal services and the protection of the feudal lords ; and hence , the first statute of mortmain ...
... whole purview of these sta- tutes was , not the preventing of land from being alienated to religious houses , but the preservation of the feudal services and the protection of the feudal lords ; and hence , the first statute of mortmain ...
Other editions - View all
An Essay on the History and Effects of the Laws of Mortmain: And the Laws ... William Francis Finlason No preview available - 2020 |
An Essay on the History and Effects of the Laws of Mortmain: And the Laws ... William Francis Finlason No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
act of Elizabeth act of George alienation of land applied benefit bequeathed bishop cardinal Carré Catholic Church Catholic priest Catholic religion chantries chapel charitable bequests charitable purposes Church of England clergy Committee common corporations Court of Chancery court of equity Crown death death-bed declared deed devise dispose donor dying ecclesiastical endowments England evidence existed favour feudal George II gift give given grant Gwennap heirs held Henry VIII Holdstock hospitals intended law of mortmain leave legacies Lord Lord Chancellor monasteries monks mortmain laws Mount Melleray object opinion parliament parties passed perpetual personal estate personal property personalty perty pious purposes poor prejudice prevent principle Protestant Protestantism question real property reason Reformation reign religious houses religious purposes Reports respect restrictions Roman Catholic schools secret trusts Sherborne Sir F spiritual statutes of mortmain superstitious take effect testamentary dispositions testator tion undue influence void witnesses
Popular passages
Page 243 - That it shall be lawful for every person to devise, bequeath, or dispose of, by his will executed in manner hereinafter required, all real estate and all personal estate which he shall be entitled to, either at law or in equity, at the time of his death...
Page 246 - Be it therefore enacted, that every Jesuit, and every member of any other religious order, community, or society of the Church of Rome, bound by monastic or religious vows...
Page 233 - Charta and divers other wholesome laws as prejudicial to and against the common utility ; nevertheless this publick mischief has of late greatly increased by many large and improvident alienations or dispositions made by languishing or dying persons or by other persons to uses called charitable uses to take place after their deaths to the disherison of their lawful heirs.
Page 40 - Five hundred poor I have in yearly pay, Who twice a day their wither'd hands hold up Toward heaven, to pardon blood ; and I have built Two chantries, where the sad and solemn priests Sing still for Richard's soul.
Page 25 - The king to his Justices of the Bench greeting. Where of late it was provided that religious men should not enter into the fees of any without licence and will of the chief lord of whom such fees be holden immediately...
Page 50 - ... lest the gifts, intended to be employed upon purposes grounded upon charity, might in change of times (contrary to the minds of the givers) be confiscated into the king's treasury. For religion being variable, according to the pleasure of succeeding princes, that which at one time is held for orthodox, may at another be accounted superstitious, and then such lands are confiscated, as appears by the Statute of Chantries, 1 Edw.
Page 246 - Jesuits and members of other religious orders, communities, or societies of the Church of Rome, bound by monastic or religious vows...