¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Frauds
1. fraud [n] - See also: fraud
Lexicographical Neighbors of Frauds
Literary usage of Frauds
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1921)
"frauds, statute of <S=»90(4)—Sale by two parties held separate contracts, so that
delivery under one was not sufficient part performance of other. ..."
2. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Chancery: During by Great Britain Court of Chancery, Edward Thurlow Thurlow, Alexander Wedderburn Rosslyn, Jonathan Cogswell Perkins (1844)
"I collect then, that previously to the Statute of frauds or the Statute of Charles
II. as to guardianship, any declaration, from which an intention to ..."
3. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"The action of the Postmaster-General was thus made conclusive, no provision being
made for a judicial review. frauds, Electoral. See ELECTORAL frauds AND ..."
4. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1903)
"S. statute of frauds because signed by only one of the trustees 1m whom the ...
In Ignorance of the Invalidity of such lease under the statute of frauds. ..."
5. Principles of the Law of Contract: With a Chapter on the Law of Agency by William Reynell Anson, Arthur Linton Corbin (1919)
"The Statute of frauds, 1677, § 4, requires that written evidence should be supplied
in the ... THE STATUTE OF frauds 1. Provisions of the Fourth Section 95. ..."
6. Handbook of the Law of Trusts by George Gleason Bogert (1921)
"The seventh section of the English Statute of frauds, enacted in 1677, required
express ... A trustee may be estopped to set up the Statute of frauds. ..."
7. History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 by James Ford Rhodes (1904)
"Here are two conclusions of the committee : they had discovered " gigantic and
shameless frauds on the government"; they "are overwhelmed with astonishment ..."
8. A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence: As Administered in the United States of by John Norton Pomeroy (1882)
"The statute of frauds ing what it is said the statute forbids. Again, this theory
is iu direct conflict with the well-settled doctrine, that if one of the ..."