A Practical Treatise of Powers Edward Burtenshaw Sugden 9781148512495 Books

This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
A Practical Treatise of Powers Edward Burtenshaw Sugden 9781148512495 Books
Lord St Leonards (otherwise known as Sir Edward Sugden) sat in the House of Lords, and wrote this and another fundamental text (on property law). This book on "powers" went into 8 editions.Not only is this text written with great authority and gravity, it is also written in the most delightful english. A specimen about the origin of trusts will serve:
"The increasing commerce of the country, and the consequent necessity of frequent and secret transfers of property; the desire of evading forfeitures for treason; the frauds of the clergy to increase their possessions; the desire so natural to all men of disposing of their property by will - all these circumstances concurred in sharpening men's wits to discover a mode of evading the strictness of the common law, and rendering estates transferable by the secret delivery of a deed, subject to all the capricious dispositions of the owner, as well by act inter vivos as by will."
Yes, the book is written from the perspective of a man used to writing about the disabilities of a femme covert. Yes, you do have to work a little to undertand some of the old conveyancing steps described. BUT - are you a real lawyer, or just some functionary with a licence to appear in court?
This book compares well against Farwell on Powers, though the later Thomas on Powers describes the modern use of this flexible concept - eg in superannuation/pension funds. The Australian book, MacLean on Powers, is also worth snapping up.
If you have trouble getting Sugden from this source, visit Proquest's UMI "Books on Demand" - like I did. Produced from microfilm, on demand, in soft covers, the text is nevertheless quite readable, and book is very satisfying to work from.
In short, if you have a difficult problem about powers, read Sugden, then Thomas, then Farwell, and MacLean (being much shorter and more compact) may have something on the question as well. By the way, Thomas will set you back AUD800, so don't think it is any cheaper than getting both Sugden and Farwell!!!
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Tags : A Practical Treatise of Powers [Edward Burtenshaw Sugden] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters,Edward Burtenshaw Sugden,A Practical Treatise of Powers,Nabu Press,1148512497,IQ-9781148512495,General,Jurisprudence & general issues,Law General,Legal Reference Law Profession
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A Practical Treatise of Powers Edward Burtenshaw Sugden 9781148512495 Books Reviews
Lord St Leonards (otherwise known as Sir Edward Sugden) sat in the House of Lords, and wrote this and another fundamental text (on property law). This book on "powers" went into 8 editions.
Not only is this text written with great authority and gravity, it is also written in the most delightful english. A specimen about the origin of trusts will serve
"The increasing commerce of the country, and the consequent necessity of frequent and secret transfers of property; the desire of evading forfeitures for treason; the frauds of the clergy to increase their possessions; the desire so natural to all men of disposing of their property by will - all these circumstances concurred in sharpening men's wits to discover a mode of evading the strictness of the common law, and rendering estates transferable by the secret delivery of a deed, subject to all the capricious dispositions of the owner, as well by act inter vivos as by will."
Yes, the book is written from the perspective of a man used to writing about the disabilities of a femme covert. Yes, you do have to work a little to undertand some of the old conveyancing steps described. BUT - are you a real lawyer, or just some functionary with a licence to appear in court?
This book compares well against Farwell on Powers, though the later Thomas on Powers describes the modern use of this flexible concept - eg in superannuation/pension funds. The Australian book, MacLean on Powers, is also worth snapping up.
If you have trouble getting Sugden from this source, visit Proquest's UMI "Books on Demand" - like I did. Produced from microfilm, on demand, in soft covers, the text is nevertheless quite readable, and book is very satisfying to work from.
In short, if you have a difficult problem about powers, read Sugden, then Thomas, then Farwell, and MacLean (being much shorter and more compact) may have something on the question as well. By the way, Thomas will set you back AUD800, so don't think it is any cheaper than getting both Sugden and Farwell!!!

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