Interestingly, even if a court orders that ONE party be
given exclusive possession of the matrimonial home, it can still direct that party to make periodic payments to the other spouse (among other things), pay for all or part of the repair and maintenance of the matrimonial home, and keep or remove certain contents of the matrimonial home.
Direct that a spouse be
given exclusive possession of the home (regardless of whose name the property is in);
It means that those who recognize the agape of God in the historical revelation can be thankful that it has come to them there, while they remember that it does not
give them an exclusive possession of the truth.
A lease doesn't transfer the cooker to you:
it gives you exclusive possession of a dwelling containing the cooker.
Not exact matches
As an appreciation to your loyal support we made sure to
give all players in
possession of Reus an
exclusive 25 % discount for the upcoming month on Steam and GoG.
As predicted by Litigation, the House of Lords last month unanimously ruled in favour of the occupier in Street v Mountford
giving a kiss of death to
exclusive possession licence agreements and, for good measure, a fatal peck to non-
exclusive agreements.
On the completion of the new library, the college leased it to the company on terms which
gave the company
exclusive possession of the library.
After you and your lawyer make an application for an
Exclusive Possession Order, your partner will be notified of the court hearing and he or she will be
given an opportunity to oppose the order.
For example, if a court is considering making an Order
giving one spouse
exclusive possession of the matrimonial home, the court is obliged under the Family Law Act to take into account the following:
The post-arrest conditions typically
give rise to the accuser gaining de facto custody of children and
exclusive possession of the matrimonial home.
The confirmation provisions operate to
give full effect to either specific tenures or categories of tenures resulting in the extinguishment of native title, where there is a grant of
exclusive possession, or the partial extinguishment of native title where there is no grant of
exclusive possession.
They were admitted to be the rightful occupants of the soil, with a legal as well as just claim to retain
possession of it, and to use it according to their own discretion; but their rights to complete sovereignty, as independent nations, were necessarily diminished, and their power to dispose of the soil at their own will, to whomsoever they pleased, was denied by the original fundamental principle that discovery
gave exclusive title to those who made it.