Transactions, Volume 11

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Page 78 - ... the rent at which the property might reasonably be expected to let from year to year, free from all usual tenant's rates and taxes, and tithe commutation rentcharge (if any), and deducting therefrom the probable average annual cost of the repairs, insurance, and other expenses ,if any) necessary to maintain the same in a state to command such rent...
Page 37 - Where by a certificate of their surveyor it appears to the authority which is liable or has undertaken to repair any highway, whether a main road or not, that, having regard to the average expense of repairing highways in the neighbourhood, extraordinary expenses have been incurred by such authority in repairing such highway by reason of the damage caused by excessive weight passing along the same, or extraordinary traffic thereon...
Page 78 - ... the rent at which the same might reasonably be expected to let from year to year, free of all usual tenants' rates and taxes, and tithe commutation rent-charge, if any, and deducting therefrom the probable average annual cost of the repairs, insurance and other expenses, if any, necessary to maintain them in a state to command such rent...
Page 146 - ... rates and taxes and if the landlord undertook to bear the cost of the repairs and insurance, and the other expenses, if any, necessary to maintain the hereditament in a state to command the rent.
Page 33 - My first duty, in addressing you from this chair, is sincerely to thank you for the honour you have done me in electing me...
Page 247 - Tenant's Rates and Taxes, and Tithe Commutation Rent-charge, if any, and deducting therefrom the probable average annual cost of the repairs, insurance, and other expenses, if any, necessary to maintain them in a state to command such Rent...
Page 217 - Whether the respondents are entitled to take into consideration, in their assessment, the value of the line to the appellants as an integral part of the...
Page lxxxii - ... when the rains were abundant and the hills and all uncultivated places were shaded by extensive groves. The removal of the trees was certainly the cause of the present evil. The opening of the soil to the vertical sun rapidly dries up the moisture and prevents the rain from sinking to the roots of the plants.
Page 264 - A PERFITE PLATFORME OF A HOPPE GARDEN, and Necessarie Instructions for the Making and Mayntenaunce thereof, with Notes and Rules for Reformation of all Abuses, commonly practised therein, very necessarie and expedient for all Men to have which in any wise have to doe with Hops, now newly corrected and augmented by REYNOLD SCOT.
Page lxxxii - It is recorded of these that in former times they were clothed with dense forests, and their older inhabitants remembered when the rains were abundant and the hills and all uncultivated places were shaded by extensive groves. The removal of the trees was certainly the cause of the present evil.

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