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"poinding" Definitions
  1. a process by which a creditor seizes movable property so as to become vested with its title and the right of sale or appropriation in satisfaction of a debt

9 Sentences With "poinding"

How to use poinding in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "poinding" and check conjugation/comparative form for "poinding". Mastering all the usages of "poinding" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Poinding was a diligence that allowed a creditor to seize moveable property from a debtor. Its usage was recommended for abolishment by the Scottish Law Commission's Report on Poinding and Warrant Sales, (Scot Law Com No 177) (2000) and was formally abolished by the Abolition of Poindings and Warrant Sales Act 2001. Another type of diligence, real poinding, allowed a secured creditor to recover a debt by seizing goods held on the secured land by the 2001 Act.Abolition of Poindings and Warrant Sales Act 2001 s.1(3).
The "arrest warrant" at issue on this bridge, likely had to do with Alexander Muschet's Letters of Horning and Poinding against John of Duchray for failure to repay a debt of 2500 Scottish marks.
The method of declaring a person a rebel was by giving three blasts on a horn and publicly proclaiming the fact; hence the expression "put to the horn". The subsequent process, a warrant directing a messenger-at-arms to charge the debtor to pay or perform in terms of the letters, was called letters of horning. This system of execution was simplified by the Personal Diligence Act of 1838, and execution was thereafter usually by diligence (see writ of execution). The granting of letters of horning, letters of horning and poinding, letters of poinding, and letters of caption all ceased to be competent following the Debtors (Scotland) Act 1987.
Debt Arrangement and Attachment (Scotland) Act 2002 s.10(2). However, a sheriff court officer is entitled to proceed on the assumption that any property in possession of the debtor is also owned by them.Debt Arrangement and Attachment (Scotland) Act 2002 s.13 Attachment replaced the diligence of poinding, after a sustained political campaign by Scottish Socialist Party leader Tommy Sheridan MSP.
One suggestion is that the name Polnoon is a corruption of the old Scots word 'poinding', meaning a ransom, however the word 'Pol' may instead refer to a pool in a river, such as is present below Polnoon's site. Blaeu's map of circa 1654 records the castle as 'Pounuyn'. Punone is the name applied in a 19th-century Montgomery family history.Reilly, Page 10 Buchan has is as 'Punoon' in 1840.
In 1813 his uncle James Hamilton of Springhill agreed to pay £40 towards his father's debts to fend off creditors, but this was never paid. His father was then pursued through the courts from 1818-1822, resulting in the poinding of his goods. His father removed to Currie where he died in June 1824. Hamilton's earliest known architectural drawing, dated 1813, is a plan requested by the Dean of Guild for a scheme by Robert Burn (architect) (1752–1815) to remodel a house on St Andrew Street.
The property or money held by the pursuer in such an action is called the fund 'in medio', because it is, or may be, subject to the claims of all the claimants, and as yet belongs to none of them. It is thus common to them all, and forms the centre or substance of the litigation. (See Trayner's Latin Maxims, under "In Medio") Multiplepoinding literally means double diligence. Poinding is in Scots law a diligence whereby a debtor's property is carried directly to a creditor.
The Abolition of Poindings and Warrant Sales Act 2001 was an Act of the Scottish Parliament to abolish the previous practice in which a debtor’s goods are priced (poinding) in preparation for the enforced sale of the debtor’s possessions (warrant sale). The legislation was introduced in 1999 as a member's bill by Tommy Sheridan MSP, the sole member of the Scottish Socialist Party in the Parliament. The original draft of the bill proposed that it would have immediate effect, but this was subsequently amended to delay implementation of the bill until 2002, so that alternative means of debt recovery could be devised. The Scottish Executive eventually proposed the Debt Arrangement and Attachment Bill, which became the Debt Arrangement and Attachment Bill Act 2002 and repealed the Abolition of Poindings and Warrant Sales Act.
52-54 A Border Reiver : statue in Carlisle Richard II's reign saw a failed attempt by the English Crown to lessen the power of the northern magnates and to manipulate their hold on the Wardenships (the Wardens becoming paid officers by the end of the 1380s) and it also saw intensive cross-border raiding and destruction. However, the use of border law was strengthened, perhaps because the region fell more closely under the influence of the Wardens (particularly the Percies and Nevilles in England and the Douglas family in Scotland). For example, the problem of felons fleeing to the various liberties where the King's writ did not run, was partially solved by making the lord of one of the largest of them (the Bishop of Durham who held the Liberty of Durham) Warden of the East March. Distraining ('poinding') was abolished in 1386 as being unworkable, and responsibility for compensation was given to the Wardens alone.

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