Future interests are interests in real or personal property, a gift or trust, or other things in which the privilege of possession or of enjoyment is in the future and not the present. They are interests that will come into being at a future point in time. There are five classes of futu...
Collins Dictionary of Law © W.J. Stewart, 2006 INCORPOREAL. Not consisting of matter. 2. Things incorporeal. are those which are not the object of sense, which cannot be seen or felt, but which we can easily, conceive in the understanding, as rights, actions, successions, easements,...
Possession is perceived by the Jordanian scholarship as being applied only to tangible things. This article argues that the Jordanian Civil Law was misinterpreted, and advances an argument that possession may apply to both corporeal and incorporeal property. Jordanian courts can rely on this premise ...