- liferent, etc.)
Corporeal moveable property (e.g. furniture, car, books, etc.)
Incorporeal moveable property (e.g.
intellectual property rights, rights...
-
essential property of matter.
Carrying the
logic forward more consistently,
Joseph Priestley (1733–1804)
argued that
corporeal properties transcend contact...
- heres, heir) is any kind of
property that can be inherited.
Hereditaments are
divided into
corporeal and incorporeal.
Corporeal hereditaments are "such as...
-
broker Cooperative apartment Co-op Co-ownership
Copyhold Corporation Corporeal property Corrective maintenance Cost
basis Council housing Counteroffer Courtesy...
- Benson,
Marjorie L; Bowden, Marie-Ann; Newman,
Dwight (2008).
Understanding Property: A
Guide (2nd ed.).
Thomson Carswell. "Animus testandi".
Merriam Webster...
-
Private property is a
legal designation for the
ownership of
property by non-governmental
legal entities.
Private property is
distinguishable from public...
- that are
corporeal or incorporeal, but also
public law
relations with a
proprietary character, and the
resultant rights and interests."
Property in the...
-
become part of the land. Real
property is
generally sub-classified into:
corporeal hereditaments –
tangible real
property (land)
incorporeal hereditaments...
-
disposition in
Scots law is a
formal deed
transferring ownership of
corporeal heritable property. It acts as the
conveyancing stage as the
second of
three stages...
-
incorporeal heritable property meaning they
existed but
without any
physical attributes (eg land
ownership which is
corporeal property). Most
baronies were...