¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inures
1. inure [v] - See also: inure
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inures
Literary usage of Inures
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1918)
"That a title acquired by a mortgagor Ьт purchase at an execution sale held upon
a prior judgment inures to the benefit of ihi mortgagee is true although the ..."
2. Institutes of American Law by John Bouvier (1854)
"This is requisite in most cases, for when a release inures by way of enlargement
of the ... How a release inures. 2068. A release may inure in various ways, ..."
3. A Treatise on the Examination of Titles to Real Estate and the Preparation by W. B. Martindale (1885)
"To whose Benefit a Patent inures.—A patent, as we have remarked, ... ~But when
granted, a patent inures to the benefit of any one to whom the patentee is ..."
4. The Law of Real Property and Other Interests in Land by Herbert Thorndike Tiffany (1920)
"... while tiie grantor can alone sue in ejectment or otherwise for the recovery
of the land, a recovery by him inures to the benefit of the grantee,00 and ..."
5. A Treatise on the Federal Corporation Tax Law: Including Therein a by Thomas Gold Frost (1911)
"Meaning of the Phrase, " No Part of the Net Income of Which inures to the Benefit
of Any Private Stockholder or Individual." — It should be noted that only ..."
6. The American and English Encyclopaedia of Law by David Shephard Garland, James Cockcroft, Lucius Polk McGehee, Charles Porterfield (1904)
"Payment oí Taxes by One Joint Tenant or tenant in common inures to the benefit
of all.1 Payment by an Agent of the taxpayer is equivalent to a payment by ..."
7. Rose's Notes on the United States Supreme Court Reports (2 Dallas to 241 by Walter Malins Rose, Charles Lawrence Thompson, United States Supreme Court (1917)
"590, holding that confirmation inures to claimant, though he had but an equitable
title; ... inures ..."
8. Remarks on Literary Property by Philip Houlbrooke Nicklin, Joseph Lowe (1838)
"... in Opposition to Authors' Rights—His True Reason —What the Law takes from
Authors for the sake of the Public, inures to the benefit of Publishers. ..."