Search Results for: COMPEL

eviction

eviction. The act or process of legally dispossessing a person of land or rental property. See FORCIBLE ENTRY AND DETAINER. Cf. EJECTMENT. [Cases: Forcible Entry and Detainer 6; Landlord and Tenant 287.] actual eviction. A physical expulsion of a person from land or rental property. [Cases: Landlord and Tenant 171(1). C.J.S. Landlord and Tenant § […]

eviction Read More »

lease for life

lease for life. Hist. A lease of land for the duration of a specified number of lives instead of for a specified term of years. • Unlike a tenant for a term of years, a lessee for life could recover the land if dispossessed. “The rent payable was usually fairly small, but a fine was

lease for life Read More »

enforcement

enforcement, n. The act or process of compelling compliance with a law, mandate, command, decree, or agreement. extrajudicial enforcement. See SELF-HELP. law enforcement. See LAW ENFORCEMENT. remedial enforcement. See secondary right under RIGHT. sanctional enforcement. See secondary right under RIGHT. secondary enforcement. See secondary right under RIGHT. selective enforcement. See SELECTIVE ENFORCEMENT. specific enforcement. See

enforcement Read More »

extort

extort, vb. 1. To compel or coerce (a confession, etc.) by means that overcome one’s power to resist. 2. To gain by wrongful methods; to obtain in an unlawful manner; to exact wrongfully by threat or intimidation. — extortive, adj.

extort Read More »

petition of right

petition of right. 1. (cap.) One of the four great charters of English liberty (3 Car. (1628)), establishing that “no man be compelled to make or yield any gift, loan, benevolence, tax, or such like charge, without common consent by act of parliament.” • The other three great charters are Magna Carta, the Habeas Corpus

petition of right Read More »

Scroll to Top