Although Lord Hoffmann had there used a double negative, he held that toleration by the landowner was consistent with user as of right. |
|
Despite the fact that his father was a landowner, town councillor, and clergyman we hear of no attempt to rescue or ransom the captive. |
|
The land was outside the developer's control, but he was encouraged to believe an agreement might be reached with the landowner. |
|
We applied, as the landowner on behalf of Southern, for the proper permissions to alter the existing depot building. |
|
Although it reduced the power of the landowner, small absentee landowners emerged. |
|
A trespasser who enters another's land may cause the landowner no financial loss. |
|
The scheme was devised in response to a request from a landowner for projects to enhance the wildlife value of his land. |
|
Upon the death of a landowner, land is divided in equal portions among the surviving children. |
|
He is a former landowner, whose lands had been included in an agricultural reform programme decades before. |
|
She claimed that the landowner could have built his home on land further back from the road on land which he had now sold. |
|
One of the first programs instituted by the Japanese was land reform that made the landowner the sole owner. |
|
Corsham Town Council is opposing a landowner who wants to use his industrial land for shredding motor tyres. |
|
Sometimes, too, the commune would rent or purchase additional land from the landowner or from the state. |
|
Residents had traditionally signed long leases and paid an annual rent to the landowner. |
|
He gives an example from 1775 when the principal landowner in the Buckinghamshire hamlet calculated residual income. |
|
Origo was an Anglo-American woman raised outside Florence and married to a prominent Italian landowner. |
|
The landowner gets quick cash, the company gets wood for chips, and workers at local sawmills get laid off. |
|
She said a survey had been carried out in Tosside following an approach from a planning agent on behalf of a local landowner. |
|
In order to trap him forever, the landowner pulls a rock, the size of a small car, over the cave mouth. |
|
The arcade of shops in the middle of Silver End is to be sold once a development brief has been agreed by the landowner, Braintree Council. |
|
|
The landowner specifically sought Specht out as a tenant because he wanted an organic farmer managing his land. |
|
It still belongs to the landowner, who will continue to pay for its upkeep maintenance and conservation. |
|
He described to two children how he and a heathen landowner, out fishing, had been marooned on a rock during a storm. |
|
The authority of the early medieval Church in England was no different to that of any other landowner. |
|
The private landowner needs to obtain a court order to move them on from his or her land. |
|
It is no longer in existence, so responsibility for the site falls back on to the landowner. |
|
Most of the sites of ground nesting bees we have examined where made by mining bees or digger bees and posed no hazard to the landowner. |
|
Under Texas law, a person found taking deer, antelope or bighorns without landowner permission faces a State Jail Felony criminal charge. |
|
But Lord Lansdowne is the first to admit that the public perception of the wealthy landowner living in the big house is far from the reality. |
|
Most residents borrowed money from relatives, banks, moneylenders, or the landowner, who charged 10 percent interest per month. |
|
No doubt, the intention of the landowner throughout is to hold a market monthly on these Saturdays. |
|
Supposing a landowner exploits his tenants and mulcts them of the fruit of their toil by appropriating it to his own use. |
|
Surrounding their dwelling were maize plantations and vineyards, owned by a wealthy landowner. |
|
He wrote to the landowner implying that he had also encountered an Early Medieval ditch on one of the lower breaks of slope on the northern face. |
|
The story is autobiographical, and the tyrannical, captious, arbitrary, and selfish landowner is the author's mother, Varvara Petrovna Turgeneva. |
|
The landowner risks having the pasture become overgrazed, resulting in future weed problems, reduced production, and lowered value. |
|
However, these villages' customary landowner clans refused the dam's construction, outlining several reasons. |
|
The wealthy and sadistic landowner is a caricature, complete with a clipped upper-class accent and hysterically pompous manner. |
|
He said the council would clear the drains with the permission of the landowner. |
|
Defra does not have compulsory powers to sample deer and needs permission from the landowner or deer owner. |
|
|
The landowner instantly conceives a dislike of the dog and demands that she be gotten rid of. |
|
In 1806, what appeared to be a simple, even naive romance novel was written by a fireside at the country seat of an English landowner in Sligo. |
|
I expect politeness and courtesy towards me as landowner, my family, friends, guests and visitors. |
|
As rent and repayment for seeds or other supplies, the farmer pays the landowner with a portion of the crops grown on the land. |
|
The landowner may feel a guilt of sorts when he converts the land into a hunting preserve. |
|
Determined to live up to her new role as genteel landowner, the pop icon is opposing plans to allow ramblers to access her estate. |
|
Oftentimes the denudation of whole estates followed the death of the landowner. |
|
This passive resistance to change was the despair of the improving landowner, who tended to relapse into apathy after a few years of vain effort. |
|
The complaining landowner may also distrain the livestock to secure payment of the damages, including a reasonable cost for the distrainment. |
|
If a landowner refuses entry, the operator can begin condemnation proceedings. |
|
This was William Mair, esquire, merchant, landowner, magistrate and Deputy Lieutenant for Middlesex. |
|
After the expiry of the lease period, the landowner will be at his discretion to convert the land into a shopping complex or a multiplex. |
|
A Bradford Council spokesman said legally only the landowner could apply to a court for possession of the land. |
|
He was searching a field at Sutton-on-the-Forest with the permission of the landowner on the understanding that the proceeds of any finds were shared equally. |
|
In his brown robe, faded under the sun to the color of his weathered face and callused hands, he looked more the fellahin than the wealthy landowner. |
|
The landowner and racehorse breeder and his artist wife, gemma, are close friends of the Middleton family. |
|
We will try to negotiate with the landowner and if that fails regretfully we may have to apply for a court injunction but this is very much a position of last resort. |
|
I have considered it a privilege to watch fox cubs play, otters fish, salmon leap, and blackcock lek without causing disturbance to wildlife or landowner. |
|
Patterson secured the permission of the landowner to venture onto the property. |
|
For example, unexpected medical bills may make it necessary for a landowner to harvest and sell timber that would otherwise have been allowed to grow longer. |
|
|
He knew that the ruling class are in some ways as much outsiders as vagrants and dossers, which is why the landowner has a sneaking sympathy for the poacher. |
|
The landowner has a duty of care to the community dependent upon him. |
|
The third eaglet was never found despite a search by the Flint Creek volunteers and the landowner. |
|
The real Watson was a sociopathic landowner in southwest Florida where land and water know no fixed boundary. |
|
Chief among the amendments to the bill was a section creating a permit that would allow a landowner to kill antlerless white-tailed deer believed to be depredating crops. |
|
But Mumu is afraid of the landowner and bares her teeth to her. |
|
That same evening, they are entertaining a local landowner, the marquis de Cambremer. |
|
The landowner would have a very big say in who was appointed to the various livings and would frequently endow the churches and provide running expenses. |
|
It was the landowner who provided the costly armies for the Carolingians. |
|
If they failed, the provincial government could carry out the necessary measures and charge the costs to the landowner or municipality. |
|
Within minutes, David Zabaneh, son of a Belizian landowner, was left seriously injured. |
|
Besides donating an easement, a landowner can place land in a land trust in several ways. |
|
The finder of treasure trove owns it against the landowner and everyone else except the true owner. |
|
Known as a 'forehanded' man, Cushing became a landowner and an investor in local industries. |
|
Almost every Scottish landowner who had money to spare is said to have invested in the Darien scheme. |
|
Richard was slain during the battle, supposedly by the major Welsh landowner Rhys ap Thomas with a blow to the head from his poleaxe. |
|
The largest private landowner is the Badgworthy Land Company, which represents hunting interests. |
|
Gilbert's father was from Thierville in the lordship of Brionne in Normandy, and was either a small landowner or a petty knight. |
|
The landowner Fred Johnson granted permission for an excavation to search for the rest of the hoard. |
|
Sir William Gage was a Sussex landowner and Edwin Stead was a resident of Maidstone in Kent. |
|
|
Buyers have included Sylvester Stallone, Ted Turner and Christopher Lambert, and most notably Luciano Benetton, Patagonia's largest landowner. |
|
John Lilburne was the son of Richard Lilburne, a landowner of estates at Thickley Punchardon and elsewhere in County Durham. |
|
A poem dated to the first half of the 11th century is an elegy for Aeddon, a landowner on Anglesey. |
|
The first commercial attempts at slate mining took place in 1787, when a private partnership obtained a lease from the landowner, Assheton Smith. |
|
An Act of 1555 required each landowner to produce a cart, horses or bullocks, and two men to work 4 days on roads. |
|
Thomas Austin, a British landowner had rabbits released on his estate in Victoria because he missed hunting them. |
|
Overages often seem the perfect solution to persuade a reluctant landowner to part with his property. |
|
As there was no secret ballot until 1872, the landowner could evict electors who did not vote for the man he wanted. |
|
In 1834, James Frampton, a local landowner and magistrate, wrote to Home Secretary Lord Melbourne to complain about the union. |
|
The apartment is smaller than one she had previously, from which she says she was renovicted, or forced to move so the landowner could renovate. |
|
A shooting lodge was constructed for the Kaiser at Martindale by the major local landowner, Hugh Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale. |
|
Although camping in England is illegal without the permission of the landowner, there is a tradition of wild camping in the Lake District. |
|
After the Restoration of the monarchy, one Furness landowner, Colonel Sawry, attempted a rising. |
|
The National Trust is a major landowner in the district, owning extensive tracts of moorland and a number of farms, including some in Edale. |
|
The low cost of land, and the need to increase timber production meant that by 1939 the Forestry Commission was the largest landowner in Britain. |
|
For example, a single landowner may be required to conserve a wildlife corridor as mitigation for developing the site. |
|
But the paths have been subject to a complex legal row involving the landowner, island residents and Anglesey Council spanning 61 years. |
|
Coke's descendants through Henry include the Earls of Leicester, particularly Coke of Norfolk, a landowner, Member of Parliament and agricultural reformer. |
|
The hide would differ in size according to the value and resources of the land, and the landowner would have to provide service based on how many hides he owned. |
|
On Henry's death, Edward conferred on Gaunt the second creation of the title of Duke of Lancaster, which made Gaunt, after Edward, the wealthiest landowner in England. |
|
|
Clint Eastwood directs and stars in this Western as a mysterious gunslinging preacher who comes to the aid of a mining settlement being threatened by a ruthless landowner. |
|
Under the 1882 act a deed of guardianship could be entered into by a landowner, in which the monument, but not the land it stands on, becomes the property of the state. |
|
In September Teach and Hornigold encountered Stede Bonnet, a landowner and military officer from a wealthy family who had turned to piracy earlier that year. |
|
Later, the children's writer Beatrix Potter also wrote in the region and became a major landowner, granting much of her property to the National Trust on her death. |
|
All they have to do is reach an agreement with the landowner. |
|
In 1735 Handel received the text for a new oratorio named Saul from its librettist Charles Jennens, a wealthy landowner with musical and literary interests. |
|
He also retained control of much of the lands of Harold and his family, which made the king the largest secular landowner in England by a wide margin. |
|
These enclosures were often undertaken unilaterally by the landowner. |
|
In 1880, a radical young Protestant landowner, Charles Stewart Parnell became chairman, and in the 1880 general election, the League won 63 seats. |
|
In 2012 the RSPB leased two farms from the landowner United Utilities. |
|
Tenants must get countersignatures from the landowner if their agreements have less than five years to run but are welcomed to apply for the scheme. |
|
It also had the advantage, for the landowner, that there were fewer tenants to collect rent from, thus reducing the administrative burden of the estate. |
|
After the demise of the red-legged partridge, it was immortalised in a watercolour painting by Northumberland landowner Lord Ridley, a lifelong artist and ornithologist. |
|
Also in this issue, New Mexico's largest landowner, Ted Turner, unveiled a new ecotourism opportunity on his million-plus acres in the Land of Enchantment. |
|
The Shropshire landowner Eadric the Wild, in alliance with the Welsh rulers of Gwynedd and Powys, raised a revolt in western Mercia, fighting Norman forces based in Hereford. |
|
The landowner may retain other rights to the land, such as rights to minerals and large timber, and to any common rights left unexercised by the commoners. |
|
The landowner of the shore may redeem the new land at market price. |
|
Walkers can also use permissive paths, where the public does not have a legal right to walk, but where the landowner has granted permission for them to walk. |
|
In Alberta, wolves on private land may be baited and hunted by the landowner without requiring a license, and in some areas, wolf hunting bounty programs exist. |
|
In exchange for military protection, the lords exploited the peasants into providing food, crops, crafts, homage, and other services to the landowner. |
|