B.Currie.Ehrenzweig and The Statute of Fraud:An Inquiry into the "Rule of Validation". Okla.L.Rev . 1965Currie, Ehrenzweig and the Statute of Frauds: An Inquiry into the “Rule of Validation,” 18 OKLA. L. REV. 243, 249 (1965). See Neuhaus, Legal Certainty Versus Equity in the ...
Related to statute:Statute of frauds An act of a legislature that declares, proscribes, or commands something; a specific law, expressed in writing. A statute is a written law passed by a legislature on the state or federal level. Statutes set forth general propositions of law that courts ap...
The Statute of Uses was a radical statute forced through a recalcitrant English Parliament in 1535 by a willful King Henry VIII. Essentially, the statute eliminated a sleight of hand that had been fashioned by landholders to avoid paying royal fees associated with land. These royal fees, called...
for frauds that are made in connection with any disaster event as defined in section 102 of the Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, which can be consulted at 42 U.S.C. 5122. This act focuses upon federal powers and responses in the event of natural disasters or other emergencies....
Also found in:Dictionary,Thesaurus,Encyclopedia. MILE, measure. A length of a thousand paces, or seventeen hundred and sixty yards, or five thousand two hundred and eighty feet. It contains eight furlongs, every furlong being forty poles, and each pole sixteen feet six inches. 2 Stark. R....
of the statute may be suspended for any period the accused is absent from the state or, in certain states, while any other indictment for the same crime is pending. This suspension occurs so that the state will be able to obtain a new indictment in the event the first one is declared ...
Westminster 1931on three occasions: (a) in 1936, on the abdication of Edward VIII; (b) in 1947, on the removal of the title 'Emperor of India' from George VI's title; (c) in 1953, on the adoption of separate titles by Elizabeth II for separate countries of which she was sovereign...
States of Jersey States' Rights States' Rights Party Stating-part of a bill Station Statu liberi Status status conference Status Offense Status Quo Statuta pro publico commodo late interpretantur statute Statute de Statute merchant Statute of Statute of Frauds statute of limitations Statute of limitati...
The Statute of Wills (32 Hen. 8, c. 1) gave to landowners in England the right to dispose of land through a written will. Before the Statute of Wills was enacted by the English Parliament in 1540, landowners did not have the right to determine who would become the new owner of the ...
States of Jersey States' Rights States' Rights Party Stating-part of a bill Station Statu liberi Status status conference Status Offense Status Quo Statuta pro publico commodo late interpretantur statute Statute de Statute merchant Statute of Statute of Frauds Statute of limitation statute of limitatio...