¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Barrable
1. capable of being barred [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Barrable
Literary usage of Barrable
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Digest of the Laws of England Respecting Real Property by William Cruise (1818)
"... although of an***** JJ • ~> sometimes at the time of levying the fine, the
ancestor had only barrable. a possibility of an estate tail, which never took ..."
2. An Introduction to Conveyancing, and the New Statutes Concerning Real by William Hayes (1840)
"... were generally barrable, either by pursuing the form of a customary recovery,
or, if the custom of the manor did not require a recovery, by surrender; ..."
3. A Concise Treatise on the Law of Wills by Henry Studdy Theobald (1900)
"The test is that they must be barrable as long as they subsist. The trusts of a
term precedent to an estate tail may be void for remoteness. ..."
4. The Royal Academy of Arts: A Complete Dictionary of Contributors and Their ...by Algernon Graves by Algernon Graves (1905)
"barrable, Miss Millie. Miniature Painter. 68, Welbeck Street. 1883. 1288 Miss
Bingham. ... 649 Horatio Nelson, Esq., Miss Trelawney, Master George barrable, ..."
5. The Revised Reports by Robert Campbell, Frederick Pollock, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1900)
"Merely because, being after an estate tail, it is barrable by recovery, as was
the case in Morse v. Lord Ormonde ; [ *249 ] but, in this case, ..."