| 1926 - 548 strani
...general assembly of the whole realm. Inconsequence of this change it became a fundamental maxim « that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom and that no man can hold any part of it but what has mediately or immediately been derived as a gift... | |
| John Gabriel Woerner - 1923 - 912 strani
...became a fundamental maxim and necessary principle (though in reality, says Blackstone, a mere fiction) "that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in the kingdom; and that no man doth or can possess any part of it, but what has mediately or immediately... | |
| Elihu Lauterpacht, C. J. Greenwood, A. G. Oppenheimer - 1999 - 800 strani
...fundamental maxim, and necessary principle (though in reality a mere fiction) of our English tenures, 'that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom; and that no man doth or can possess any part of it, but what has, mediately or immediately, been derived... | |
| Iris Shagrir, Roni Ellenblum, Jonathan Simon Christopher Riley-Smith - 2007 - 504 strani
..."fundamental maxim and necessary principle (though in reality a mere fiction) of our English tenures 'that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom; and that no man doth or can possess any part of it, but what has mediately or immediately been derived... | |
| Carole Pateman, Charles Wade Mills - 2007 - 321 strani
...fundamental maxim and necessary principle (though in reality a mere fiction) of our English tenures, 'that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom' " (1899: bk II, ch. 4, p. 475). Or, as stated by Marshall in Johnson v. Macintosh, the British constitution... | |
| Kathleen Davis - 2008 - 206 strani
...fundamental maxim and necessary principle (though in reality a mere fiction) of our English tenures, 'that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom'" (II 51). And, he reasons, the oppression of the English that followed resulted from the Normans not... | |
| 1850 - 820 strani
...like ch.alk1 W whitenfrom other aggressors. Accordingly, it soon became an established legal maxim, " that the King is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom ;* and that no man doth or can possess any part of it, but what has mediately or immediately been derived... | |
| 1875 - 932 strani
...Blackstone) did it become a fundamental, and necessary principle, though in reality a mere fiction, that the king is the universal lord, and original proprietor, of all the lands in his kingdom, &c. Nevertheless, he says — " It is probable that our Saxon ancestors meant no more than to put the... | |
| |