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Updated: May 5, 2025


"I have no desire, sir, to change my mind; but, even if I should wish to do so, I cannot retract my word. There are particular circumstances in this case which I cannot explain to you in so short a time." The notary raised his eyes to the ceiling, and said in a tone of great pity, "At least, let me make him give you a deed of defeasance." "Very well, sir."

Does not Spenser gather many a metaphor from these weeds, that are most apt to grow in fattest soil? Has not Spenser his law-terms: his capias, defeasance, and duresse; his emparlance; his enure, essoyn, and escheat; his folkmote, forestall and gage; his livery and seasin, wage and waif?

The form of the mortgage is the same as that of a deed, except that it contains a clause called the Defeasance, which states that when the obligation has been met the document shall be void. The forms for "signing, sealing and delivering" a mortgage, are the same as with a deed. A mortgage must be recorded the same as a deed, the mortgagee paying the fees.

On the other hand, the members of the council and the lords and gentlemen of the pale strenuously recommended the adoption of one of the two expedients which have Neither of these writers gives us a full copy of the defeasance. been previously mentioned, as offering sufficient security for the church, and the only means of uniting the Protestant royalists in the same cause with the Catholics.

To prepare against subsequent contingencies, and to leave the king what he termed "a starting-hole," he had been careful to subjoin to his treaty a secret article called a defeasance, stipulating that the sovereign should be no further bound than he himself might think proper, after he had witnessed the efforts of the Catholics in his favour; but that Glamorgan should conceal this release from the royal knowledge till he had made every exertion in his power to procure the execution of the treaty.

In our complicated modern communities, a race is being run between moral and mental enlightenment, and the deterioration of the physical and moral constitution through the defeasance of the law of Natural Selection." Lifting her champagne glass, Olga sipped the amber bubbles from its brim, and slightly bent her head in acknowledgment. "Thanks.

It is not a fatal departure from the licence to take on board non-enumerated articles, if done so by mistake, or inadvertence; but an essential and fraudulent departure from the conditions of the licence is a total defeasance of it.

As Sir John Falstaff is, in a certain sense, always a gentleman, that is, as he is guilty of no crime that is technically held to operate in defeasance of his title to that name as a man of the world, so is Don Quixote, in everything that does not concern his monomania, a perfect gentleman and a good Christian besides.

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