「PROBATE」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

PROBATE

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  • udes solicitors, legal executives and tax and probate accountants and deals with will writing, prob
  • s moved to the secular courts by the Court of Probate Act 1857 and the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857.
  • ssure for reform, culminating in the Court of Probate Act 1857 which started the process of aboliti
  • The Court of Probate Act 1857 transferred responsibility for the g
  • The list includes: the Administration and Probate Act, the Adoption Act, the Cluster Titles Act
  • ustav Mahler, he assessed Mahler's estate for probate after his death.
  • public opinion, viewpoint diversity, estates, probate, aging, or retirement.
  • The Judge of the Court of Probate also presided over the Court for Divorce and
  • uczko served as a Justice of the Essex County Probate and Family Court, Buczko, retired in 1996.
  • uded discipline of the clergy, enforcement of probate and wills, as well as enforcement of laws tha
  • professional life, he is now a consultant on probate and tax issues to the legal company Clarke Wi
  • tly houses the Tarrant County clerk's office, probate and county courts at law, a law library, and
  • In 1836, he served as a register of probate and a county solicitor in New Hampshire, and
  • On June 4, 1987, after clearing probate and other legal hurdles, an application was m
  • uccessful law practice, served as register of probate and state's attorney, represented Royalton in
  • In 1858, when the Probate and Divorce Acts of 1857 came into force, and
  • esigned to become Justice of the Essex County Probate and Family Court.
  • Swabey & Tristram (1858-65) Probate and Divorce Reports, vols.1-4,
  • th Carolina (Supreme, Common Pleas, Sessions, Probate, and Trial Justice Courts); Sources of Munici
  • ving on the committee on labor in 1871 and on probate and insolvency and woman suffrage in 1872; ch
  • Hays was probate and county judge for Ouachita County, Arkansa
  • Civil work consisted mainly of insolvency and probate, and criminal offences were rare.
  • Sargus was elected probate and juvenile judge of Belmont County, Ohio in
  • appointed chief Judge of the Worcester County Probate and Insolvency Court.
  • He was also a judge of probate and of the Court of Common Pleas.
  • After the war he practiced probate and civil rights law and was counsel for Roos
  • Inner Temple the same year and specialised in probate and divorce cases.
  • e also served as a registrar for the court of probate and a justice of the peace for Halifax County
  • Shortly thereafter, the Suffolk County Probate and Family Court in Boston established the fi
  • s a Partner of Cannan & Peterson in charge of probate and estates.
  • mund A. Sargus, was an Ohio state senator and Probate and Juvenile Judge of Belmont County, Ohio.
  • an office park and is now the site of Bristol Probate and Family Court located at 21 Father DeValle
  • which had been the location of the Admiralty, Probate, and principal Ecclesiastical Court in Englan
  • mont House of Representatives, as register of probate, as judge of probate for the district of Wind
  • oyal Family, but although it was assessed for probate at £400,000 the entire sum was taken up by de
  • Scott's estate was valued for probate at the considerable sum of £7500.
  • After his death, his estate was sworn for probate at over £1,600,000.
  • which included a fine library, was sworn for probate at £2552.
  • The Earl's will was granted probate at Lambeth on 21 February 1458.
  • r leaving Congress, he was appointed judge of probate August 5, 1823, and held the office until his
  • monial Causes also presided over the Court of Probate, but the two Courts remained separate entitie
  • National probate calendars (1918 onwards)
  • In Loving County the posts of county clerk, probate clerk, and of district clerk are managed by t
  • he popular election of sheriffs, registers of probate, clerks of the courts, and District Attorneys
  • made in states which have adopted the Uniform Probate Code (which Massachusetts has not as of 2006)
  • Probate Code and Trusts Subcommittee
  • SB 60 UNIFORM PROBATE CODE; TRUSTS, WILLS
  • He served as probate commissioner of Allen County, Indiana from 19
  • After clearing probate, control of WXRP passed involuntarily from Wi
  • irs were forced to sell the rancho to pay the probate costs.
  • of Trial Lawyers and the American College of Probate Counsel; and served on the Board of Commissio
  • 4 and then elected as a judge of the Hartford Probate Court in 1824 and served until 1830.
  • acity until May 3, 2010, when Franklin County Probate Court Judge Eric Brown, who was appointed Chi
  • He was a judge of the probate court of Labette County from 1870 to 1882, an
  • e Commonwealth of Massachusetts, for use as a Probate Court House.
  • erving eight years as an elected chancery and probate court judge for Pulaski and Perry Counties.
  • He was registrar for the county probate court from 1867 to 1872, when he was named ju
  • essor, and was elected judge of the Orphan's ( Probate) Court of Montgomery County, Maryland, servin
  • sted federal court system, Mormon territorial probate court judge Elias Smith arrested Young under
  • The county's growth eventually pushed the probate court and registry of deeds into another buil
  • pril 2008, his brother, Byron, filed with the Probate Court to be named Melvin's guardian and conse
  • mittee from 1883 to 1885, and as judge of the probate court of Allen County from February 1882 to O
  • izen of Missouri, prosecuted his claim in the probate court of Ionia county, Michigan, against the
  • 1969, the same year that the Ouachita County Probate Court declared his wife dead: "It is the find
  • ouse of Representatives in 1903; judge of the probate court of Hennepin County, Minnesota, 1907 - 1
  • He was elected a judge of the probate court for Litchfield district in 1838.
  • erved in the state Senate 1791-1792, and as a probate court judge.
  • He was appointed judge in the probate court for Carleton County there in 1834.
  • He served as judge of the probate court of Hamilton County 1884-1890.
  • cal judges (including the previously powerful Probate Court judges) with federally appointed judges
  • He was made a judge of the probate court in 1886.
  • Death Records for Holmes County 1878-1893 in Probate Court in Millersburg.
  • He served as registrar for the probate court from 1842 to 1847.
  • uring the 1940s and, in 1950, was appointed a Probate court judge.
  • He served as judge of probate court 1866-1868 and was a member of the Flori
  • He served as judge of the probate court of Lancaster County, South Carolina fro
  • ately after, he became a judge of the Vermont probate court and the town clerk of Bennington.
  • law in Putnam in 1948, becoming judge of the probate court from 1948-1962.
  • In 1954, he became a judge of the Probate Court of Galveston County, Texas, and continu
  • ommissioner and Suffolk County, Massachusetts probate court judge Edward G. Loring remanded Burns t
  • He worked in a probate court from 1822 to 1834, and then returned to
  • ona Ana County As Shown in the Records of the Probate Court, 1861-1862, New Mexico Historical Revie
  • served in the judiciary on the Medina County Probate Court, where he was a Judge from 1968 until h
  • mont House of Representatives as judge of the probate court, as State's attorney in 1823, and as me
  • rd was Judge J.H. Lucas of the Cochise County Probate Court, who corroborated Addie Bourland's test
  • ourt of common pleas in 1811, as judge of the probate court, and served in the Massachusetts State
  • The rules apply to all civil actions except probate court, family court, small claims court, or s
  • nt Senate, and from 1880 to 1891 registrar of probate court.
  • being listed in 1930 as a clerk in a Chicago probate court.
  • That same year, he was elected Judge of the Probate Court.
  • ce of the peace and surrogate general for the Probate Court.
  • deputy clerk of the peace and as judge in the probate court.
  • tiac, Michigan and was appointed judge of the probate court.
  • field County as a justice of the peace and of probate court.
  • See also: Connecticut Probate Courts
  • include private client, estate planning, tax, probate disputes, partnership, property litigation, p
  • l was proved in the Principal Registry of the Probate Division of Her Majesty's High Court of Justi
  • Ormerod was appointed a Justice of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High C
  • In 1961 he was appointed a judge of the Probate, divorce and admiralty division, and in 1974
  • ointed as a High Court Judge, assigned to the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division on 11 January
  • neral in 1908 and became the President of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty division in 1910.
  • he High Court and Lincoln's Inn for Chancery, Probate, Divorce and Admiralty appeals, with five Lor
  • in 1964 (as Mr Justice Cumming-Bruce), in the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division (later the Fa
  • Gorell served as a Judge of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High C
  • He was made President of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division and raised to
  • ses was transferred, as its President, to the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High C
  • n he was appointed Justice of the High Court, Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty division and knighted
  • r of that branch of the bar designated as the Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty division on the eleva
  • 1075/56; 780/315; 770/532; 770/534; 154/483; Probate Docket No. 233195)
  • duary estate, debts, legacies, estate duties, probate duties and so forth, are to be deemed to have
  • ce, professional negligence, property, wills, probate, elderly client, family law system in England
  • The issue of the probate exception reached the U.S. Supreme Court, whi
  • In 1966, he was elected judge of probate for the Ellington-Vernon District and served
  • He also served as registrar of probate for Richmond County from 1842 until his death
  • t Bridgewater, Massachusetts and was judge of probate for Plymouth County, Massachusetts from 1887
  • He was made Judge of Probate for the district of New Milford in 1805, and
  • In 1824, he was appointed Judge of Probate for the district of Stamford, a district whic
  • iamstown, Vermont, and was appointed Judge of Probate for the District of Randolph in 1800.
  • w Hampshire Senate in 1821 and 1822, judge of probate for Grafton County in 1822 and 1823, and was
  • In addition, he was appointed judge of probate for Hillsborough County, New Hampshire in 181
  • Hampshire, where in 1787 he was made judge of probate for Hillsborough County, and in 1793 was stat
  • for the County of Annapolis and Registrar of Probate for the County of Annapolis.
  • orough County from 1875 to 1877, was judge of probate for Hillsborough County from 1876 to 1879, an
  • He was judge of probate for Sagadahoc County.
  • ng from politics, Budd served as registrar of probate for Digby County.
  • e Inferior Court of Common Pleas and judge of probate for Kings County.
  • Williams was a register of probate for Hancock County, Maine 1824-1838 and a sel
  • 1927, acting as executor, he posted notice of probate for the estate of Michael Joseph.
  • practice in Bangor, also serving as Judge of Probate for Penobscot County till 1840.
  • L. Putnam, who was both a farmer and Judge of Probate for Sullivan County.
  • He served as judge of probate for Middlesex County and served until his dea
  • e Court of Common Pleas in 1812, and Judge of Probate from 1814 to 1821, as well as the first presi
  • He was register of probate from 1839 to 1840 and was a member of the Sta
  • He served as judge of probate from 1878 to 1887.
  • urt from 1781 to 1802, registrar of wills and probate from 1792 to 1798 and surrogate general for t
  • He was register of probate from 1796 to 1815 and was assistant judge of
  • Certain probate functions
  • d States taxed Judge J.M. Day of the Court of Probate in Massachusetts.
  • ce of information -- registers, chancery, and probate, in the London courts, proved fruitless in an
  • McDuffie was elected judge of probate in 1868.
  • n in 1840 and moved to the office of judge of probate in 1841.
  • as appointed judge of the county court and of probate in May 1809 and continued as judge of the cou
  • d forces service ended, he became Register of probate in 1815 and served as clerk of the courts in
  • ully as a Whig Party candidate for Justice of Probate in 1844.
  • He was appointed register of probate in 1793 and was a member of the New Hampshire
  • When he died in 1426 his probate inventory - in the Borthwick Institute of His
  • His probate inventory is available at the Borthwick Insti
  • y the Kid was filed by William V. Morrison, a probate investigator, on November 15, 1950.
  • December 1441, though the precise time of its probate is not recorded.
  • Before any game, the Probate Judge must first flip a coin, usually a new S
  • ite having no law degree, he would serve as a probate judge in 1921 before being elected to the Mis
  • In 1825 he was probate judge of Howard County and was clerk of the c
  • to the bar, he practiced law and was elected probate judge of Colleton County in 1918.
  • In 1857 he was elected probate judge of De Soto County and served until 1861
  • o his law practice and was once again elected probate judge of De Soto County.
  • Edward G. Loring, a Suffolk County probate judge who also as served U.S. commissioner of
  • He beacme a county and probate judge of Drew County from 1903 to 1907 and wa
  • The same year he was elected a probate judge in Henderson County and in 1847 he went
  • from 1787 to 1790, also serving as a Vermont probate judge for the Randolph District from 1788 to
  • retary of State in the McNair administration, Probate Judge of St. Louis County and in 1832 he was
  • Robinson then served again as a probate judge from 1815 until his death four years la
  • Thomas Dickson, and, later that year, became probate judge for Colchester and Pictou districts.
  • Senate from 1866 to 1870 and as Preble County Probate Judge from 1875 to 1882.
  • e Tax Commissioner is J. David Brown, and the Probate Judge is Hon.
  • He was elected probate judge of Wayne County, Michigan; in 1842, pre
  • While Melvin's health improved, Probate Judge Jennie E. Barkey still felt that he nee
  • From 1805 to 1813, Skinner was a probate judge for the Manchester district; in the 181
  • Probate judge of Coshocton County.
  • Norton was a Probate Judge in 1846.
  • e of the peace and of the quorum in 1803, and probate judge from 1805 to 1814.
  • He was a probate judge until 1798.
  • Probate judge of Linn County 1872-1876.
  • Deputy probate judge of Ross County, Ohio.
  • County and probate judge of Drew County 1903-1907.
  • al Performance Citation from city of Warren's probate judge Thomas Swift and the International Asso
  • In 1881, he was named probate judge for Halifax County.
  • Van Vorhes was elected probate judge in 1854, but resigned.
  • He served as a probate judge in the mid-1950s.
  • He was probate judge of Yavapai County 1893-1895.
  • He then served as Sanpete County's probate judge until 1890.
  • In 1873, he was named probate judge for King's County.
  • In 1855, he was elected probate judge of Chickasaw County.
  • In 1846, he was named probate judge for Richmond County.
  • liefs representing Horner during his years as probate judge and as governor.
  • In 1856, he was elected the Probate Judge of Clarke County.
  • He was a probate judge for Barrington district from 1866 to 18
  • In 1849, he was elected probate judge for Marquette County (which then includ
  • s reported by Robert Hugh Kirksey, the former probate judge of Pickens County, Alabama.
  • From 1894 to 1900, Moore served as probate judge in Phillips County, Arkansas.
  • He was a probate judge in Cook County, Illinois from 1890 to 1
  • er returned to Athens and in 1854 was elected probate judge of Athens County.
  • He was a probate judge from 1852 to 1855 and again from 1858 t
  • Tilden was elected probate judge of Cuyahoga County and served from 1855
  • He was also prosecuting attorney and probate judge of Monroe County.
  • When the war ended, Dickinson became a probate judge of Sandusky County from 1866 until 1869
  • Probate judge of San Miguel County, New Mexico, in 18
  • ncy Francis, has served as a Washtenaw County probate judge since 1990.
  • He served as probate judge for Shelburne County and registrar of p
  • He studied law at Woodsfield, and became Probate Judge and Judge of Common Pleas.
  • He also served as a probate judge and as the State's Attorney for Litchfi
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