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The process of sub-infeudation may be repeated to an indefinite extent. The Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1874 rendered any clause in a disposition against subinfeudation null and void. [4] [7] Casualties, which are a feature of land held in feu, are certain payments made to the superior thar are contingent on the happening of certain events.
Long title: An Act of the Scottish Parliament to abolish the feudal system of land tenure; to abolish a related system of land tenure; to make new provision as respects the ownership of land; to make consequential provision for the extinction and recovery of feuduties and of certain other perpetual periodical payments and for the extinction by prescription of any obligation to pay redemption ...
3 Disposition. The Seller DISPONES the Property to the Purchaser." [27] As shown, the disposition acts in furtherance of the causa of the transfer, commonly a contract of sale, and effects the transfers (the disponement) of the property itself . However, a disposition still requires registration in the Land Register of Scotland. [21]
The National Union of Students Scotland has set out its own vision for a new, improved system in a paper called Broke Students, Broken System. Student body declares Scotland’s university and ...
These special dispositions, which appear valid ex facie but are otherwise invalid, are called a non domino (i.e. from a non-owner) dispositions and the registration process of the a non domino disposition is known under the Land Registration (Scotland) Act 2012 [124] as a prescriptive claim, and the applicant is known as a prescriptive claimant.
"the granter of a feu disposition retained an interest in the property – the superiority (or dominium directum). This interest gave the granter the right to enforce conditions over the property. The grantee had the right to possess the property (or dominium utile), providing that they did not breach any of the conditions set by the granter."
More from Scotland's papers. The Herald. The Scotsman. Daily Record. The Scottish Sun. Daily Mail. Scottish Daily Express. The Times. The Telegraph. The National. The Courier. The P&J. Glasgow ...
A schedule conveyance is a voluntary transfer in which the owner signs a special form of deed, a schedule conveyance disposition. The prescribed form for this deed is found in the Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1845. [66] In order to initiate this process, the acquiring authority must issue a notice to treat with the owner. [67] [68]