slovo | definícia |
poind (encz) | poind,zabavit v: Zdeněk Brož |
Poind (gcide) | Poind \Poind\ (poind), v. t. [See Pound to confine.]
1. To impound, as cattle. [Obs. or Scot.] --Flavel.
[1913 Webster]
2. To distrain. [Scot.] --Sir W. Scott.
[1913 Webster] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
poind (encz) | poind,zabavit v: Zdeněk Brož |
poindexter (encz) | Poindexter,Poindexter n: [jmén.] příjmení Zdeněk Brož a automatický
překlad |
poindexter (czen) | Poindexter,Poindextern: [jmén.] příjmení Zdeněk Brož a automatický
překlad |
Poinder (gcide) | Poinder \Poind"er\ (-[~e]r), n.
1. The keeper of a cattle pound; a pinder. [Obs. or Scot.]
--T. Adams.
[1913 Webster]
2. One who distrains property. [Scot.] --Jamieson.
[1913 Webster] |
POINDING (bouvier) | POINDING, Scotch. law. That diligence, affecting movable subjects, by which
their property is carried directly to, the creditor. Poinding is real or
personal. Ersk. Pr. L. Scot. 3, 6, 11.
POINDING, PERSONAL, Scotch law. Poinding of the goods belonging to the
debtor; and of those goods only.
2. It may have for its warrant either letters of horning, containing a
clause for poinding, and then it is executed by messengers; or precepts of
poinding, granted by sheriffs, commissaries, &c., which are executed by
their proper officers. No cattle pertaining to the plough, nor instruments
of tillage, can be poinded in the time of laboring or tilling the ground,
unless where the debtor, has no other goods that may be poinded. Ersk. Pr.
L. Soot. 3, 6, 11. See Distress, to which this process is somewhat similar.
POINDING, REAL, or poinding of the ground, Scotch law. Though it be properly
a diligence, this is generally considered by lawyers as a species of real
action, and is so called to distinguish it from personal poinding, which is
founded merely on an obligation to pay.
2. Every debitum fundi, whether legal or conventional, is a foundation
for this action. It is therefore competent to all creditors in debts which
make a real burden on lands. As it proceeds on a, real right, it may be
directed against all goods that can be found on the lands burdened but, 1.
Goods brought upon the ground by strangers are not subject to this
diligence. 2. Even the goods of a tenant cannot be poinded for more than his
term's rent, Ersk. Pr. L. Scot. 4, 1, 3.
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