A treatise of the principal grounds and maximes of the lawes of this nation very usefull and commodious for all students and such others as desire the knowledge and understandings of the laws / written by that most excellent and learned expositor of the law, W.N.

About this Item

Title
A treatise of the principal grounds and maximes of the lawes of this nation very usefull and commodious for all students and such others as desire the knowledge and understandings of the laws / written by that most excellent and learned expositor of the law, W.N.
Author
Noy, William, 1577-1634.
Publication
London :: Printed by T.N. for W. Lee, D. Pakeman, R. Best and G. Bedell ...,
1651.
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Subject terms
Law -- Great Britain.
Real property -- Great Britain.
Conveyancing -- Great Britain.
Cite this Item
"A treatise of the principal grounds and maximes of the lawes of this nation very usefull and commodious for all students and such others as desire the knowledge and understandings of the laws / written by that most excellent and learned expositor of the law, W.N." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A52567.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 6, 2024.

Pages

CHAP. VI. JOYNT-TENANTS.

IOynt-Tenants be such as have joynt estates in goods, or lands, where he that surviveth shal have all without incumbrance, if the Tenements abide in the same plight as they were granted.

Joynt-Tenants may have several estates;

A Joynt-Tenant cannot grant a Rent∣charge, but for terme of his own life.

A Joynt-Tenant may make a Lease for life, or for years, of his part, or Release, and the Lessee for years may enter, although the Lessor die before the Lease begin, and his

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heire shall have the Rent, but the Survivor the Reversion.

A Joynt-Tenant may have a Writ of Parti∣tion by the Statute of the 31. of H. 8. cap. 32. A Partition made by Joynt-Tenants, or Te∣nants in Common of Estates of Inheritance, must be by Indenture; by Word 'tis void.

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