Lexicographical Neighbors of Disherits
Literary usage of Disherits
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Courts of Exchequer and by Great Britain Court of Exchequer, Roger Meeson, William Newland Welsby, John Innes Clark Hare, Great Britain Court of Exchequer Chamber, Horace Binney Wallace (1846)
"... nor destroy the pale of park, for then it ceaseth to be a park ; nor he may
not destroy the stock or breed of anything, because it disherits and takes ..."
2. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of Common Pleas, and by Peregrine Bingham, Great Britain Court of Common Pleas (1831)
"... nor decay the pale of a park, for then it ceaseth to be a park; nor may he
destroy or drive away the stock or breed of any thing, because it disherits ..."
3. The Modern Law of Real Property: With an Introduction for the Student, and by Louis Arthur Goodeve (1885)
"... nor he may not destroy the stock or breed of anything, because it disherits
and takes away the perpetuity of succession, as villains, fish, deer, ..."
4. The Judicial Dictionary, of Words and Phrases Judicially Interpreted: To by Frederick Stroud (1903)
"... nor lie may not destroy or drive away the stock or breed of any thing, because
it disherits and takes away the perpetuity of succession, as villains, ..."
5. The Revised Reports: Being a Republication of Such Cases in the English by Frederick Pollock, Robert Campbell, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1904)
"... nor he may not destroy the stock or breed of any- SMITH. thing, because it
disherits and takes away the perpetuity of succession, as villains, fish, ..."
6. Cases in Equity: Selected from Decisions of English and American Courts by George Henry Boke (1915)
"... nor he may nut destroy nor drive away the stock or breed of any thing. l>e-
cause it disherits and takes away the perpetuity of succession, as villains, ..."
7. The Law of Landlord and Tenant: Being a Course of Lectures Delivered at the by John William Smith, Frederic Philip Maude, Phineas Pemberton Morris (1856)
"... nor he may not destroy the stock or breed of anything, because it disherits
and takes away the perpetuity of succession as villains, fish, deer, mises, ..."