temporary receivership
Temporary receivership is a remedy in which the court appoints a person to temporarily manage a piece of property that is in the defendant's possession.
Temporary receivership is a remedy in which the court appoints a person to temporarily manage a piece of property that is in the defendant's possession.
Tenement most often is used to refer to property involved in an easement. The property benefiting from the easement is called the dominant tenement, and the property granting the easement is called the servient tenement.
A variance is an officially granted exception to a zoning ordinance. Such exceptions may be granted on a case-by-case basis for some persuasive reason shown. See: real property
A variance is also the difference between two statements or other pieces of evidence that usually would be expected to indicate the same thing.
Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S. 365 (1926), is a U.S. Supreme Court case in which the court held that a zoning ordinance can be a valid exercise of a state's police powers.
Voluntary waste, also referred to as affirmative waste, refers to overt and willful acts of destruction performed by a tenant or life tenant that leads to the drop in value of a piece of property by harming the property or depleting natural resources available on the property.
Zoning is a legislative act dividing a jurisdiction's land into sections and regulating different land uses in each section in accordance with a zoning ordinance. While zoning was originally conceived to protect the industrial use of land, today it more broadly controls land use to protect the value of land and objectives beyond industrial development.
A zoning ordinance is a municipal law that outlines permitted uses for various sections of land. Thus, some lands may be dedicated to industrial use, while others may be set aside for residential or commercial use only. A zoning ordinance may also regulate building height, restrict sound, or require open space.