A TREATISE ON POWERS; WITH SUPPLEMENT, BRINGING THE NEW ENACTMENTS AND CASES DOWN TO 1841. BY HENRY CHANCE, ESQ., OF LINCOLN'S-INN, BARRISTER AT LAW. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II. LONDON: HENRY BUTTERWORTH, LAW BOOKSELLER, AND A. MILLIKEN, GRAFTON STREET, Dublin. 1 A TREATISE ON POWERS. CHAPTER XII. OF THE OPERATION OF APPOINTMENTS. SECTION I. GENERAL SUBJECT. [1386.] We have now to consider how appointments operate, and what is their effect. general points : We may in this section notice a few 1.-As to the Rule of an Appointee being in, under the Instrument creating the Power (1387). 2.-Some Cases particularly exemplifying the Rule (1391), including Roach v. Wadham (1392), and Cases involving Uses on Uses (1397). CHAP. XII. 1-As to the Rule of an Appointee being in, under the Instrument creating the Power. [1387.] A person claiming under an appointment, although he claims in one sense by the act of the donee of the power, |