It is the universal practice in conveyancing that enquiries as to licences would have been made. |
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Professionals, however would be required to conclude missives and do all conveyancing. |
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The company offers a range of corporate law services including employment law, conveyancing, family and personal injury. |
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Ms. Wilkin was for over 30 years, a law clerk engaged in real estate conveyancing. |
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The case concerned a claim for damages arising from the negligence of a solicitor instructed in a conveyancing transaction. |
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Those are things that will be missed in the downplaying of conveyancing to conveyancers rather than lawyers. |
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I did a fair amount of criminal law and civil law, but generally it was conveyancing. |
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We have already explained in very general terms what electronic conveyancing means and why it would improve the process of land registration. |
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There is a disconformity involving some cute conveyancing, perhaps, between the contract and the actual conveyance. |
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Notaries' role in conveyancing makes them reliable tax collectors, so change is risky while money is tight. |
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Indeed, he could be a local solicitor who had wandered in off the street en route to a spot of conveyancing. |
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However, an additional disposal period might prove very costly given that the net conveyancing costs in 1996 came to some FRF 1,4 billion. |
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In the United Kingdom, the loosening of reserved rights to provide conveyancing services in the 1980s also led to lower prices. |
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There is the example of conveyancing, which continues to be a reserved area of activity for lawyers and notaries in many Member States. |
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In the 1970s and 1980s, for example, fixed prices were abolished for conveyancing and architectural services in the United Kingdom. |
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The sum insured covers the sale price plus any related expenses, fees and conveyancing costs, less any amounts already paid prior to the death. |
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Meanwhile, Mr Wilkins has conceived a huge dislike for his obnoxiously efficient chief clerk, Mr Dunster, and his conveyancing business is going to the dogs. |
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She specialises in conveyancing, probate, wills and matrimonial work, and in her spare time enjoys skiing, sailing, riding, theatre and eating out. |
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Solicitors, my own profession, used to have a monopoly of conveyancing, the buying and selling of land. |
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There are solicitors specialising in conveyancing for property abroad. |
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At the moment, information on whether a property is at risk of flooding comes too late, often when people have already invested money in conveyancing. |
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Whereas inter vivos sales and inter vivos gifts of movables are treated quite differently, the conveyancing aspects of inter vivos sales and inter vivos gifts of immovables are quite similar. |
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Countrywide is also active in ancillary services to its real estate and lettings agency business including financial services, surveying and valuation, relocation services and conveyancing. |
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In some Member States, for example, lawyers or notaries have an exclusive right to provide conveyancing and probate services as well as an exclusive right to provide legal advice. |
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But lawyers have always cared about making money, and giving duff legal advice is seldom a good business plan. Liberalisation will probably affect low-end services first, such as will-writing and conveyancing. |
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The fact that the report makes a correction for conveyancing costs also shows that it does not relate to the situation in which Valmont bought the land but to the theoretical situation in which Valmont would sell it. |
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It should be pointed out in this connection that the plan provides for the disposal of all the assets over a maximum period of two years and that until that time provision has been made for the conveyancing costs. |
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The 1994 report also contains a correction for conveyancing costs. |
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The study finds that consumers have greater choice and are on average paying less for conveyancing services under deregulated systems, with no loss in quality. |
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Clarification that the directive does not affect the application of the property laws of the Member States with respect to the conveyancing of immovable property or the formation or transfer of immovable property rights. |
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The study led by ZERP at Bremen University carried out an analysis of the effects of professional regulation on the efficiency and performance of the conveyancing services market. |
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To it a new species of conveyancing owes its origin, which dispenses with livery of seisin, and almost entirely supercedes, in practice, the employment of common law deeds. |
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Rupert practised law, specialising in equity law and conveyancing. |
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Connecticut courts failed to recognize feme couvert property rights until 1723, when the legislature finally passed an act significantly reforming the law on conveyancing. |
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Conveyancing practice is plainly a matter within the knowledge of the courts. |
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