Public property Sentence Examples
In 1536 legislation for changing the method of general government and regulating common pasturages and public property caused extreme dissatisfaction, but for many years thereafter the form of control alternated between alcaldes selected by the inhabitants and annual governors appointed by the Council of the Indies.
In spite of the precautions of the popes, the Miserere has long been public property.
More than a third of the forests are public property and furnish a considerable addition to the revenue.
A few of the less important of his criticisms, such as the argument on miracles, became then and have since remained public property and matter of general discussion.
It became public property in 1892.
In the earlier colonies, the state allotted to proposing emigrants from amongst the needy or discontented class of citizens portions of such lands as, on the subjection of a hostile people, the state took into its possession as public property.
Chamberlain, to whom the peaceful solution of the difficulty had largely been due, retired from the task assigned him by Garcelon on the 5th of January " to protect the public property and institutions of the state" until Garcelon's successor should be duly qualified.
If you have to get probate, this document becomes public property.
The necessary money was to be found by the sale of all the public property in Italy which had been ordered to be sold by resolutions of the senate (in 81, or subsequently), but which the fear of unpopularity had deterred the consuls from selling; by the sale of lands, &c., in the provinces which had become public property since 88, and even of the domains acquired during the Mithradatic war.
The use tax is also levied on public services that assist and append different types of public property.
AdvertisementThis type of coverage also pays for repairs to public property damaged or destroyed in the accident, including fences, sign posts and mail boxes.
About the same time, by the decision of certain government officials, the right to the possession of the public property of the Doukhobors (valued at about k50,000) passed from the community to one of their members, who had formed out of the more demoralized Doukhobors a group of his own personal adherents, which was henceforth called the "Small Party."