Lexicographical Neighbors of Subtenancies
Literary usage of Subtenancies
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Land Law (Ireland) Act, 1881: With the Statutes Incorporated Therewith by Timothy Michael Healy (1882)
"... during the continuance of the subtenancies, stand in the relation of immediate
landlord to the sub-tenants, and have the rights, and be subject to the ..."
2. A Short History of the English People by John Richard Green (1907)
"... larger holdings were divided by their owners into smaller subtenancies, the
under-tenants were bound by the same conditions of service to their lord. ..."
3. History of the English People by John Richard Green (1900)
"When the larger holdings were divided by their owners into smaller subtenancies,
the under-tenants were bound by the same conditions of service to their ..."
4. History of the English People by John Richard Green (1879)
"When the larger holdings were divided by their owners into smaller subtenancies,
the under-tenants were bound by the same conditions of service to their ..."
5. History of the English People by John Richard Green (1878)
"When the larger holdings were divided by their owners into smaller subtenancies,
the under-tenants were bound by the same conditions of service to their ..."
6. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"The determination of a lease by forfeiture has the same effect as its determination
in any other way, in destroying subtenancies or other rights created ..."
7. The Ontario Reports: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in the Queen's by Ontario High Court of Justice, Ontario, High Court of Justice (1893)
"A lessee under such a lease created a number of subtenancies on part oi the land
with leave. He then assigned all the rents, etc., to an assignee. ..."
8. The Law of Real Property and Other Interests in Land by Herbert Thorndike Tiffany (1903)
"This process of the creation of subtenancies could, in theory, continue to an
indefinite degree, and in fact sometimes there \vere as many as six or seven ..."