movables
11Heirship movables — Heirship Heir ship, n. The state, character, or privileges of an heir; right of inheriting. [1913 Webster] {Heirship movables}, certain kinds of movables which the heir is entitled to take, besides the heritable estate. [Scot.] [1913 Webster] …
12goods and movables — See goods …
13heirship movables — Certain personal property of a decedent which under the law went to the heir and not to the executor. In a will, sometimes equivalent to issue, heirs, or natural heirs. 57 Am J1st Wills § 1371. See bodily heirs …
14Mobilia inhaerent ossibus domini — Movables cling to the bones of their owner. Holbrook v Ford, 153 Ill 633, 39 NE 1091 …
15Mobilia non habent situm — Movables have no situs. Wyeth Hardware & Co. v H. F. Lang & Co. 127 Mo 242, 29 SW 1010 …
16mobilia sequuntur personam — Movables follow the person. Personal property, no matter how ponderous or unwieldly, in legal contemplation changes location with every change of the owner s domicil. 16 Am J2d Confl L, § 29 …
17volatile estates — Movables of a solid cbaracter, such as tables and other heavy furniture. See 2 Bl Comm 428 …
18property law — Introduction principles, policies, and rules by which disputes over property are to be resolved and by which property transactions may be structured. What distinguishes property law from other kinds of law is that property law deals with… …
19PROPERTY — Classification Property may be divided into different classes in accordance with the various legal principles applicable thereto. One common division is between immovable property and movables, distinguished from each other in the following… …
20ACQUISITION — (Heb. קִנְיָן; kinyan) the act whereby a person voluntarily obtains legal rights. In Jewish law almost all kinds of rights, whether proprietary (jus in rem) or contractual (jus in personam; see obligations ), can be voluntarily acquired only by… …