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Form of Conveyance of W.H. Whites Fee-farm Rents.
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VII. ‘And whereas, under and by virtue of the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Nineteenth Sections of the Act of Parliament passed in the Session of Parliament held in the Fifty-seventh Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Third, Chapter Ninety-seven, and divers subsequent Acts of Parliament, the Parts still remaining unsold of certain Rents heretofore Crown Rents, Chief Rents, Fee Farm and Quit Rents, and other Rents, formerly the Property of William Henry White deceased, in the said Act of the Fifty-seventh Year of King George the Third more particularly mentioned, are now vested in the Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Woods, Forests, and Land Revenues, in trust to sell and dispose thereof in manner in the said Act of the Fifty-seventh Year of King George the Third directed: And whereas it is considered expedient that the Course of Proceeding in regard to the Sale of the said Rents, and the Form of Conveyance thereof, should be respectively assimilated to the Course of Proceeding and Form of Conveyance of other Fee Farm or other dry or unimprovable Rents under the Management or Control of the Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Woods, Forests, and Land Revenues, and for that Purpose that the said Rents formerly the Property of the said William Henry White should be vested in Her Majesty, Her Heirs and Successors, and be from Time to Time managed and sold by the said Commissioners in like Manner as such other Rents as aforesaid:’ Be it therefore enacted, That from and after the passing of this Act all such and such Parts of all the Rents which were formerly Crown Rents, Chief Rents, Fee Farm Quit Rents, and other Rents, formerly the Property of the said William Henry White, remaining unsold, which by virtue of the Enactment herein-before recited or referred to are now vested or expressed to be vested in the Commissioners of Her Mejesty’s Woods, Forests, and Land Revenues for the Time being, shall henceforth become and be vested in Her Majesty, Her Heirs and Successors, as if the same were Part of the Hereditary Possessions and Land Revenues of the Crown under the Management or Control of the Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Woods, Forests, and Land Revenues, and shall be from Time to Time recoverable, dealt with, and be subject to be sold in like Manner and by the same Forms of Proceeding and Conveyance generally as other Parts of the said Possessions and Land Revenues under the Management or Control of the same Commissioners or either of them: Provided always, that it any Surplus shall remain from the Sale of the said Rents after the Debt in the said Act of the Fifty-seventh Years of King George the Third mentioned to be due from the said William.
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