Casu Proviso

Legal Definition and Related Resources of Casu proviso

Meaning of Casu proviso

(Lat. in the case provided for). In practice. A writ of entry framed under the provisions of the statute of Gloucester (6 Edw. I.) c. 7, which lay for the benefit of the reversioner when a tenant in dower aliened in fee or for life. It seems to have received this name to distinguish it from a similar writ framed under the provisions of St. Westminster. II. (13 Edw. I.) c. 24, where a tenant by curtesy had alienated as above, and which was known emphatically as the writ in consimili casu. The writ is now practically obsolete. Fitzh. Nat. Brev. 205; Dane, Abr. Index.

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This definition of Casu Proviso is based on the The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary . This entry needs to be proofread.

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