Concept
Landlord and tenant - Great Britain
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The rights of churches and colleges defended: in answer to a pamphlet, call'd, An enquiry into the customary estates and tenant rights of those who hold lands of church and other foundations, by the Term of Three Lives, and Twenty One Years, &c. By Everard Fleetwood, Esq; With remarks upon some other Pieces upon the same Subject. By Dicaiophilus Cantabrigiensis.
Long, Roger, 1680-1770.Date: 1731- Books
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The laws respecting landlords, tenants, and lodgers, laid down in a plain, easy and familiar manner; Together with Practical Directions Concerning Leases, Assignments, Surrenders, Agreements, Covenants, Repairs, Waste, Fire, &c. Demand and Payment of Rent, Distress and Ejectment; as collected from the several reports and other books of authority, up to the present time. To which are also added, Cautions and Directions relative to the Hiring and Letting of Houses and Apartments. Also Distinct Treatises on the Various Kinds of Estates, Particularly Estates for Life, for Years, and Copyhold Estates. With an Appendix of Precedents, Comprising a great Variety of the most approved Forms of Leases, Assignments, Surrenders, Covenants, Notices to Quit, Receipts for Rent, and Precedents in Distress. To which is likewise now affixed, for the Assistance of the unprofessional Reader, A Dictionary of Law Terms, explaining the Import of such technical Words and Phrases as occur in the Work. By James Barry Bird, of New-Inn, Esq.
Bird, James Barry.Date: [1796]- Books
Tenants : the people on the frontline of Britain's housing emergency / Vicky Spratt.
Spratt, VickyDate: 2022- Books
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A compendious library of the law: necessary for persons of all degress and professions. In two parts. ...
Date: 1743- Books
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Rural improvements: or, essays on the most rational methods of improving estates; accomodated to the soil, climate, and circumstances of England: In which it is clearly demonstrated, that the Landed Estates of this Kingdom may with certainty, and at a very moderate Expence, be increased to double their present Value. The Method of doing which is clearly pointed out, and evinced from undeniable Principles, deduced from a Series of real Practice and Experience. Essay First; Shewing the Improvements that respect the Occupier. Essay Second; The Improvements that respect the Land-Owner. The whole interspersed with a Variety of interesting Reflections and Observations, on the Poor, Poor-Laws, high Prices of Provisions, Labour, decay of Foreign Trade, Population, Corn-Trade, Bounty on Exportation; with rational and proper Measures respecting the same. Also, Remarks On Messrs. Harte, Tull, Miller, Chateauvieux, Compleat English Farmer, Young, Peters, Weston, &c. By a land owner.
Wimpey, Joseph, 1739-1808.Date: M.DCC.LXXV. [1775]