slovo | definícia |
movables (encz) | movables,movitosti Zdeněk Brož |
Movables (gcide) | Movable \Mov"a*ble\, n.; pl. Movables.
1. An article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of
property not fixed, or not a part of real estate;
generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. [Also
spelled moveable.]
[1913 Webster]
Furnished with the most rich and princely movables.
--Evelyn.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Rom. Law) Property not attached to the soil.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The word is not convertible with personal property,
since rents and similar incidents of the soil which are
personal property by our law are immovables by the
Roman law. --Wharton.
[1913 Webster] |
MOVABLES (bouvier) | MOVABLES, estates. Such subjects of property as attend a man's person
wherever he goes, in contradistinction to things immovable. (q.v.)
2. Things movable by their nature are such as may be carried from one
place to another, whether they move themselves, as cattle, or cannot be
removed without an extraneous power, as inanimate things. Movables are
further distinguished into such as are in possession, or which are in the
power of the owner, as, a horse in actual use, a piece of furniture in a
man's own house; or such as are in the possession of another, and can only
be recovered by action, which are therefore said to be in action, as a debt.
Vide art. Personal Property, and Fonb. Eq. Index, h.t.; Pow. Mortg. Index,
h.t.; 2 Bl. Com. 884; Civ. Code of Lo. art. 464 to 472; 1 Bouv. Inst. n.
462.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
immovables (encz) | immovables,nemovitosti n: pl. Zdeněk Brož |
Heirship movables (gcide) | Heirship \Heir"ship\, n.
The state, character, or privileges of an heir; right of
inheriting.
[1913 Webster]
Heirship movables, certain kinds of movables which the heir
is entitled to take, besides the heritable estate. [Scot.]
[1913 Webster] |
Movables (gcide) | Movable \Mov"a*ble\, n.; pl. Movables.
1. An article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of
property not fixed, or not a part of real estate;
generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. [Also
spelled moveable.]
[1913 Webster]
Furnished with the most rich and princely movables.
--Evelyn.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Rom. Law) Property not attached to the soil.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The word is not convertible with personal property,
since rents and similar incidents of the soil which are
personal property by our law are immovables by the
Roman law. --Wharton.
[1913 Webster] |
IMMOVABLES (bouvier) | IMMOVABLES, civil law. Things are movable or immovable. Immovables, res
immobiles, are things in general, such as cannot move themselves or be
removed from one place to another. But this definition, strictly speaking,
is applicable only to such things as are immovable by their own nature, and
not to such as are so only by the destination of the law.
2. There are things immovable by their nature, others by their
destination, and others by the objects to which they are applied.
3.-1. Lands and buildings or other constructions, whether they have
their foundations in the soil or not, are immovable by their nature. By the
common law, buildings erected on the land are not considered real estate,
unless they have been let into, or united to the land, or to substances
previously connected therewith. Ferard on Fixt. 2.
4.-2. Things, which the owner of the land has placed upon it for its
service and improvement, are immovables by destination, as seeds, plants,
fodder, manure, pigeons in a pigeon-house, bee-hives, and the like. By the
common. law, erections with or without a foundation, when made for the
purpose of trade, are considered personal estate. 2 Pet. S. C. Rep. 137; 3
Atk. 13; Ambl. 113
5.-3. A servitude established on real estate, is an instance of an
immovable, which is so considered in consequence of the object to which it
is applied. Vide Civil Code of Louis. B. 2, t. 1, c. 2, art. 453-463; Poth.
Des Choses, Sec. 1; Poth. de la Communante, n. 25, et seq; Clef des Lois
Romaines, mot Immeubles.
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MOVABLES (bouvier) | MOVABLES, estates. Such subjects of property as attend a man's person
wherever he goes, in contradistinction to things immovable. (q.v.)
2. Things movable by their nature are such as may be carried from one
place to another, whether they move themselves, as cattle, or cannot be
removed without an extraneous power, as inanimate things. Movables are
further distinguished into such as are in possession, or which are in the
power of the owner, as, a horse in actual use, a piece of furniture in a
man's own house; or such as are in the possession of another, and can only
be recovered by action, which are therefore said to be in action, as a debt.
Vide art. Personal Property, and Fonb. Eq. Index, h.t.; Pow. Mortg. Index,
h.t.; 2 Bl. Com. 884; Civ. Code of Lo. art. 464 to 472; 1 Bouv. Inst. n.
462.
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