This article examines the history and development of prescriptive easements in Newfoundland and Labrador and the legal standards required to find such an easement to exist. The article concludes that the appropriate inquiry is not merely an examination of the length of use, but also the nature and extent of use, and that rigid application of timelines should not apply
Why does Employment Insurance play such a dominant role in rural Newfoundland communities? This arti...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines governance in Newfoundland from 1699 to...
On 21 December 1933, The Newfoundland Act was passed in British Parliament. In the midst of economic...
This article examines the history and development of prescriptive easements in Newfoundland and Labr...
This paper examines the Chattels Real Act of Newfoundland and Labrador and the strict treatment of p...
During the post-Confederation era in Newfoundland and Labrador, the provincial government incentiviz...
Confederation with Canada in 1949 marked a drastic change in Newfoundland’s identity as it moved fro...
Newfoundland legal history has tended to focus on the period prior to the achievement of representat...
In his work The British Empire in America, published in 1708, the historian John Oldmixon observed c...
This book contains the laws, judicative acts (both in force and inactive), and the Royal Charter by ...
This article challenges the conventional view that a colonial state did not exist in eighteenth-cent...
In 1675, King Charles II approved an order to evict all English residents from Newfoundland. To make...
The relationship between Canada and Newfoundland was under stress for a number of different reasons ...
This paper examines the operation of the Quieting of Titles Act in Newfoundland and Labrador, and in...
Description based on: 2001.Imprint varies slightly.Vols. for [18 ]-2000 issued by the government und...
Why does Employment Insurance play such a dominant role in rural Newfoundland communities? This arti...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines governance in Newfoundland from 1699 to...
On 21 December 1933, The Newfoundland Act was passed in British Parliament. In the midst of economic...
This article examines the history and development of prescriptive easements in Newfoundland and Labr...
This paper examines the Chattels Real Act of Newfoundland and Labrador and the strict treatment of p...
During the post-Confederation era in Newfoundland and Labrador, the provincial government incentiviz...
Confederation with Canada in 1949 marked a drastic change in Newfoundland’s identity as it moved fro...
Newfoundland legal history has tended to focus on the period prior to the achievement of representat...
In his work The British Empire in America, published in 1708, the historian John Oldmixon observed c...
This book contains the laws, judicative acts (both in force and inactive), and the Royal Charter by ...
This article challenges the conventional view that a colonial state did not exist in eighteenth-cent...
In 1675, King Charles II approved an order to evict all English residents from Newfoundland. To make...
The relationship between Canada and Newfoundland was under stress for a number of different reasons ...
This paper examines the operation of the Quieting of Titles Act in Newfoundland and Labrador, and in...
Description based on: 2001.Imprint varies slightly.Vols. for [18 ]-2000 issued by the government und...
Why does Employment Insurance play such a dominant role in rural Newfoundland communities? This arti...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines governance in Newfoundland from 1699 to...
On 21 December 1933, The Newfoundland Act was passed in British Parliament. In the midst of economic...