Telegraph and telephone-Watermen

Front Cover
Sweet and Maxwell, limited, 1898 - Law reports, digests, etc

From inside the book

Selected pages

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 561 - ... person or no such person able and willing to act, then the surviving or continuing trustees or trustee for the time being, or the personal representatives of the last surviving or continuing trustee, may, by writing appoint another person or other persons to be a trustee or trustees in the place of the trustee dead, remaining out of the United Kingdom, desiring to be discharged, refusing, or being unfit or being incapable, as aforesaid.
Page 675 - ... to be laid out in the purchase of lands to be settled to the same uses as the settled estate.
Page 553 - ... to appoint any other person or persons to be a trustee or trustees in the place of the trustee or trustees so dying, or desiring to be discharged, or refusing or becoming unfit or incapable to act as aforesaid...
Page 643 - ... and hold the surplus as capital, which was to be laid out in the purchase of lands to be settled to the like uses.
Page 677 - The settlement directed that the moneys to arise from the sale of any of the settled estates should be laid out in the purchase of other lands to be settled to the same uses...
Page 647 - Sanby, during her life, for her separate use, without power of anticipation; and after her death...
Page 119 - Nor is it necessary, in order to give a right to an injunction that a specific trade-mark should be infringed ; but it is sufficient that the court is satisfied that there was an intent on the part of the respondent to palm off his goods as the goods of the complainant, and that he persists in so doing after being requested to desist.
Page 455 - ... children, who, being sons, should attain twenty-one, or, being daughters, should attain that age or marry...
Page 391 - Held that the real estate was to be settled on the nephew for life, with remainder to his sons successively in tail male, with remainder to his daughters as tenants in common in...
Page 9 - Here there is no counter proposal. The words are, "Please wire whether you would accept forty for delivery over two months, or, if not, the longest limit you would give." There is nothing specific by way of offer or rejection, but a mere inquiry, which should have been answered and not treated as a rejection of the offer. This ground of objection therefore fails.

Bibliographic information