xml:lang="en" lang="en" dir="ltr">

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Keep up to date with the latest news - subscribe to the Transcribe Bentham newsletter; Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts

JB/031/014/001

Jump to: navigation, search
Completed

Click Here To Edit

1828 Aug. 8
Blackstone

2
Defences
(2 Ch. Possession

You have a house, which you have let to a person
who is thereby become a tenant of yours.

One person there is against whom you are in possession of
it: that is to say any person the tenant excepted or not excepted
who claims the property of it.

Another person there is as against whom you are not in possession of it: that person in possession of it.

Another person there is against whom you are not in possession
of it: that person is in possession of it: Without taking any rent against his security to enter
in and upon it otherwise than according to any such
right in or under the nature of the transaction you may have
exposed to yourself would be to do a wrong — to committ an
offence. That The business which at the hands of your tenant
the transaction entitles you to is — not the any use capable
of being made of the house, but the rent which he
stands bound to pay you in consideration of it: a entire
service what it should provide. he stands bound to render
you: a service consisting in the transfer of of made to you
of money to a certain value.

(1) In legal possession when
deriving benefit from it,
you are not punishable
& actions are if they obstruct
you in deriving said benefit

You are in the legal sense in possession of the thing, you
have the legal possession of it, in so far as you be
in case of your making use of having a benefit from it [in your own person
or by the hands of others] you do no wrong are not punishable,
at the same time that any other person or
this or that other person is punishable in the event of his
obstructing you opposing physical obstruction to any operation
by the performance of which you would be making use of it.

Two ways of deriving benefit —
1 use 2 transference

There are two ways in which a man may
derive a benefit from a thing: one the way of use, and
the way of exchange transference: that is or as the phrase is where a price
is paid for it by the person to whom it is transferred, in
the way of exchange.



Identifier: | JB/031/014/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 31.

Date_1

1828-08-08

Marginal Summary Numbering

not numbered

Box

031

Main Headings

civil code

Folio number

014

Info in main headings field

blackstone

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

d2 / e2

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

b&m 1828

Marginals

richard doane

Paper Producer

arthur moore; richard doane

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1828

Notes public

]

ID Number

9700

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk