| William Blackstone - 1836 - 694 síður
...would have been by the rules of the common law disappropriated, had not a clause in those statutes intervened, to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c., formerly held the same, at the time of their dissolution. This, though perhaps scarcely defensible, was not without example;... | |
| Sir William BLACKSTONE - 1837 - 468 síður
...would have been, by the rules of the common law, disappropriated ; had not a clause in those statutes intervened, to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same, at the tim« of their dissolution. This, though perhnps scarcely defensible, WHS not without... | |
| 1837 - 512 síður
...appropriations of the several parsonages which were attached to the religious houses were transferred to the king, in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. held the same at the time of their dissolution. The same thing was done by former kings when the alien... | |
| William Blackstone - 1838 - 910 síður
...would have been by the rules of the common law disappropriated ; had not a clause in those statutes intervened, to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same, at the time of their dissolution. This, though perhaps scarcely defensible, was not without example... | |
| William Blackstone, James Stewart - 1839 - 556 síður
...would have been by the rules of the common law disappropriated ; had not a clause in those statutes intervened, to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same, at the time of their dissolution. This, though perhaps scarcely defensible, was not without example... | |
| George Bowyer - 1841 - 742 síður
...and would have been, by the rules of the common law, disappropriated, were given by those statutes to the king, in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same, at the time of their dissolution. This, as Blackstone observes, though hardly defensible, was... | |
| Encyclopaedia - 1845 - 868 síður
...would have been by the rules of the common law Jitappropriated ; had not a clause in those statutes intervened, to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same, at the time of their dissolution. id. Hi. It was the law, that for man's good and quiet, reduced... | |
| 1846 - 698 síður
...England,) would have been by tinrules of the common law disappropriatcd, had not a clause in those statutes intervened to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same at the time of their dissolution.' (British Encyclopaedia, Appendix.) Hence all the lay impropriations... | |
| George Oliver - 1846 - 226 síður
...England, would have been by the rule of common law disappropriated, had not a clause in those statutes intervened to give them to the king, in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c., formerly held them. This though perhaps scarcely defensible, was not without example ; for the same was done in former... | |
| William Blackstone, George Sharswood - 1860 - 874 síður
...would have been by the rules of the common law disappropriated, had not a clause in those statutes intervened, to give them to the king in as ample a manner as the abbots, &c. formerly held the same, at the time of their dissolution. This, though perhaps scarcely defensible, was not without example... | |
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