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Encyclopedia > Landowner


Landowner or Landholder is a holder of the estate in land with considerable rights of ownership or, simply put, an owner of land. In the old Europe a Landholder was usually a nobleman. See "Land ownership" and Property (ownership right) for more. An estate is the right, interest, or nature of interest, a person has in real property. ... The Lords and Barons prove their Nobility by hanging their Banners and exposing their Coats-of-arms at the Windows of the Lodge of the Heralds. ... This page deals with property as ownership rights. ... // Use of the term The concept of property or ownership has no single or universally accepted definition. ...


The term should not be confused with the simple "landlord". A landlord, is the owner of a house, apartment, condominium, or real estate which is rented or leased to an individual or business, who is called the tenant. ...


Since wealth and landed property are now severed concepts, upper class may be more accurate, whereas the former landed gentry in UK had them both. The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view. ... Landed gentry is a term traditionally applied in Britain to members of the upper class with country estates often (but not always) farmed on their behalf by others, and who might be without a peerage or other hereditary title. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Landowner Liability (1246 words)
Landowners have the highest legal duty to invitees; they must repair or warn invitees of known dangerous conditions or dangers that would be revealed after a reasonable inspection.
Landowners owe no greater care to a recreational guest than they would a trespasser, provided he or she does not earn more than two times his or her property tax bill from recreational fees (this was changed to four times for landowners with agricultural exemptions beginning September 1, 1997).
Landowners who invite or give permission to recreational guests to use their property do not assure that the property is safe or owe the person a greater degree of protection than a trespasser.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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