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Fee tail

 - 7 dictionary results

fee tail

–noun
See under fee (def. 4a).

Origin:
1250–1300; ME < AF

fee

[fee] noun, verb, feed, fee⋅ing.
–noun
1. a charge or payment for professional services: a doctor's fee.
2. a sum paid or charged for a privilege: an admission fee.
3. a charge allowed by law for the service of a public officer.
4. Law.
a. an estate of inheritance in land, either absolute and without limitation to any particular class of heirs(fee simple) or limited to a particular class of heirs (fee tail).
b. an inheritable estate in land held of a feudal lord on condition of the performing of certain services.
c. a territory held in fee.
5. a gratuity; tip.
–verb (used with object)
6. to give a fee to.
7. Chiefly Scot. to hire; employ.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME < AF; OF fie, var. of fief fief. See feudal


feeless, adjective


1. stipend, salary, emolument; honorarium.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To Fee tail
fee tail  
n.   pl. fees tail
An estate in land limited in inheritance to a particular class of heirs.

[Middle English fe taille, from Anglo-Norman fee taile : fe, fee; see fee + Old French taile, past participle of tailier, to cut; see tailor.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

fee 
1292, from O.Fr. fieu, from M.L. feodum "land or other property whose use is granted in return for service," probably from Frank. *fehu-od "payment-estate," in which the first element is cognate with O.E. feoh "money, property, cattle" (also Ger. Vieh "cattle," Goth. faihu "money, fortune"), from PIE *peku- "cattle" (cf. Skt. pasu, Lith. pekus "cattle;" L. pecu "cattle," pecunia "money, property"); second element similar to O.E. ead "wealth." Sense of "payment for services" first recorded c.1390. Fee-simple is "absolute ownership," as opposed to fee-tail "entailed ownership," inheritance limited to some particular class of heirs (from O.Fr. taillir "to cut, to limit").
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Legal Dictionary

Main Entry: fee
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, fief, from Old French fief, ultimately from a Germanic word akin to Old High German fehu cattle
1 : an inheritable freehold estate in real property; especially : FEE SIMPLE —compare LEASEHOLD life estate at ESTATE
absolute fee
: a fee granted with no restrictions or limitations on alienability : FEE SIMPLE ABSOLUTE at, FEE SIMPLE
conditional fee
: a fee that is subject to a condition: as a : FEE SIMPLE CONDITIONAL at, FEE SIMPLE b : FEE SIMPLE ON CONDITION SUBSEQUENT at, FEE SIMPLE
defeasible fee
: a fee that is subject to terminating or being terminated
determinable fee
: a defeasible fee that terminates automatically upon the occurrence of a specified event : FEE SIMPLE DETERMINABLE at, FEE SIMPLE
fee patent
: a fee simple absolute that is granted by a patent from the U.S. government; also : a patent that grants a fee simple absolute fee patent had never been issued —U.S. Code>
NOTE: Allotments of parcels of land in reservations are held in private ownership by fee patents.
fee tail
: a fee which is granted to an individual and to that individual's descendants, which is subject to a reversion or a remainder if a tenant in tail dies with no lineal descendants, and which is not freely alienable —see also ENTAIL De Donis Conditionalibus in the IMPORTANT LAWS section —compare fee simple conditional at FEE SIMPLE
NOTE: The fee tail developed out of the fee simple conditional as a means to ensure that property would remain intact and in the family. Instead of giving the grantee a fee simple absolute once he or she has a child, which the grantee could then alienate (as by selling), the fee tail creates a future interest in the descendants which prevents the grantee and the descendants from alienating the property. A fee tail is created by a conveyance to the grantee and to the heirs of the grantee's body. In most jurisdictions, the fee tail is not recognized.
2 : a fixed amount or percentage charged; especially : a sum paid or charged for a service fees>
contingency fee
: a fee for the services of a lawyer paid upon successful completion of the services and usually calculated as a percentage of the gain obtained for the client called also contingency contingent fee —compare CHAMPERTY, MAINTENANCE
fil·ing fee
: a fee charged for the filing of a document
NOTE: Filing fees are ordinarily charged in civil matters with the filing of the complaint.
jury fee
: a fee that is assessed in some courts as part of the cost of a civil jury trial
orig·i·na·tion fee
: a fee charged by a lender for the preparation and processing of a loan—in fee : under title that creates a fee

Main Entry: fee tail
see FEE 1
Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law, © 1996 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Encyclopedia

fee tail

in feudal English law, an interest in land bound up inalienably in the grantee and then forever to his direct descendants. A basic condition of entail was that if the grantee died without direct descendants the land reverted to the grantor. The concept, feudal in origin, supported a landed aristocracy because it served to prevent the disintegration of large estates through divisible inheritance or the lack of heirs. Statutory reforms in England now permit the owner to convey the entailed land by a simple deed and even by will

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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.
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