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  2. Freehold (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freehold_(law)

    A freehold, in common law jurisdictions or Commonwealth countries such as England and Wales, Australia, [1] Canada, Ireland, India and twenty states in the United States, is the common mode of ownership of real property, or land, [a] and all immovable structures attached to such land.

  3. Re Conegrade Ltd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re_Conegrade_Ltd

    Conegrade Ltd was a small engineering company. It had four directors, two of which were Mr and Mrs Clarke. Conegrade Ltd had a loan account, which included debts for loans by directors to the company. All board members attended a vote, and voted in favour, of selling a freehold property in Station Road, Uppingham, worth £125,000 to Mr and Mrs ...

  4. Ground rent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_rent

    In this sense, a ground rent is created when a freehold piece of land is sold on a long lease or leases. [1] The ground rent provides an income for the landowner. [ 2 ] In economics , ground rent is a form of economic rent meaning all value accruing to titleholders as a result of the exclusive ownership of title privilege to location .

  5. Re a Company (No 001418 of 1988) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re_a_Company_(No_001418_of...

    As to 1985 onwards little, in my judgment, needs to be said. The position continued to deteriorate. The accounts sent to Barclays for January 1985 showed a net assets deficiency of £185,451. There was a significant scale of dishonoured cheques from February 1985 onwards, and on 26 March 1985 Barclays wrote to the company suggesting that it ...

  6. Rentcharge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rentcharge

    Rentcharge is a legal device which permitted an annual payment to be continually levied on a freehold property. A deed made with the parties' knowledge is legally effective against land to effect this and has been lawful since the 1290 Statute of Quia Emptores ().

  7. Forty-shilling freeholders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forty-shilling_freeholders

    c. 2), which amended and re-enacted the 1430 law to make clear that the resident of a county had to have a forty-shilling freehold in that county to be a voter there. Over the course of time many different types of property were accepted as being forty-shilling freeholds and the residence requirement disappeared.

  8. Rhone v Stephens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhone_v_Stephens

    Rhone v Stephens [1994] UKHL 3 is an English land law case, at the court of final appeal level, concerning the succession to the burden of positive covenants in freehold land within which it is of relatively broad application.

  9. Fleecehold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleecehold

    Fleecehold refers to the inclusion of onerous terms in the deeds of a freehold property or the lease of a leasehold property in the United Kingdom.The practice of fleecehold is known to be increasing in the UK, according to the results of FOI requests to the Land Registry. [1]