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.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A52567.0001.001
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 June 17, 2024.

Pages

The Habendum. Habend'.

THe Office of the Habendum, is to name again the Feoffee, and to limit the cer∣tainty of the estate, and it may and doth sometimes qualifie the generall implication of the estate, which by construction and in∣tendment of Law passeth in the premisses: for an example whereof see Bucklers case in the second Book of Sir Ed. Cokes Reports, and Throgmortons case, in Plowdens Commenta∣ries. It is to be noted, that the premisses may be inlarged by the Habendum, but not abridg∣ed,

Page 146

as it plainly appeareth, aswell in the said case of Throgmorton, as in Worteslies case re∣ported also by Master Plowden, and I have read (as my collections tell me) that it is re∣quired of the habendum, to include the pre∣misses. Moreover, the habendum, (as W. N. Esquire, hath it in the treatise of the grounds and maximes of the Law) must not be repug∣nant to the premisses, for if it be, it is void, and the Deed will take effect by the Premis∣ses, which is very worthy of Observation.

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