| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas - Election law - 1873 - 820 pages
...is not necessary for the alienation of property, that there should be a formal deed of conveyance. A contract for valuable consideration, by which it...court of equity will decree specific performance. In the language of Lord Hardwick, the vendor becomes a trustee for the vendee ; subject, of course,... | |
| Law - 1881 - 1014 pages
...is not necessary, for the alienation of property, that there should be a formal deed of conveyance. A contract for valuable consideration, by which it...court of equity will decree specific performance. In the as to make the assignor the bailee of those goods, or holder of them as trustee for the supposed... | |
| Law - 1881 - 982 pages
...is not necessary, for the alienation of property, that there should be a formal deed of conveyance. A contract for valuable consideration, by which it...court of equity will decree specific performance. In the as to make the assignor the bailee of those goods, or holder of them as trustee for the supposed... | |
| Great Britain, Edward William Fithian - Bills of sale - 1882 - 180 pages
...LJ Ch. 193. In moving the judgment of the House of Lords in that case, Lord Westbury, C., said : " A contract for valuable consideration, by which it...Court of Equity will decree specific performance. In the language of Lord Hardwicke, the vendor becomes a trustee for the vendee, subject of course to... | |
| Leonard Augustus Jones - Chattel mortgages - 1894 - 936 pages
...is not necessary, for the alienation of property, that there should be a formal deed of conveyance. A contract for valuable consideration, by which it...court of equity will decree specific performance. In the language of Lord Hardwicke, the vendor becomes a trustee for the vendee ; subject, of course,... | |
| Robert Campbell, Irving Browne - Annotations and citations (Law) - 1896 - 932 pages
...it is not necessary for the alienation of property that there should be a formal deed of conveyance. A contract for valuable consideration, by which it is agreed to make a present transfer of property, passed at once the beneficial interest, provided the contract is one of which a Court of Equity would... | |
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