not+in+possession+of

  • 31Constructive possession — is a legal fiction to describe a situation where an individual has actual control over chattels or real property without actually having physical control of the same assets. At law, a person with constructive possession stands in the same legal… …

    Wikipedia

  • 32hostile possession — Possession of land under a claim of an exclusive right thereto, thereby denying the right of any other person. An open and notorious possession of such a character that a claim of ownership inconsistent with the existence of a right on the part… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 33Adverse possession — Squatter s rights redirects here. For the film, see Squatter s Rights (film). Property law …

    Wikipedia

  • 34Demonic Possession —     Demonical Possession     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Demonical Possession     (See also DEMONOLOGY, DEMONIACS, EXORCISM, EXORCIST.)     Man is in various ways subject to the influence of evil spirits. By original sin he brough …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 35Demonic possession — Part of a series of articles on the paranormal Main articles Afterlife · Astral projection · Aura · Clairvoyance · Close encounter · Cold spo …

    Wikipedia

  • 36Spirit possession — Part of a series of articles on the paranormal Main articles Afterlife · Astral projection · Aura · Clairvoyance · Close encounter · Cold spo …

    Wikipedia

  • 37Weapon possession (crime) — Weapon possession refers to a class of crime regarding the unlawful possession of a weapon by a citizen within an established society …

    Wikipedia

  • 38Maid of Orlach Possession — (1831)    The most remarkable POSSESSION case from the files of the German mesmerist Justinus Kerner. The Maid of Orlach was a dairymaid over whom a White Spirit and a Black Spirit fought for control. The spirits were those of a sinning nun and a …

    Encyclopedia of Demons and Demonology

  • 39You shall not steal — is one of the Ten Commandments,[1] of the Torah (the Pentateuch), which are widely understood as moral imperatives by legal scholars, Jewish scholars, Catholic scholars, and Post Reformation scholars.[2] Though usually understood to prohibit the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 40Inalienable possession — (opposed to alienable possession) in linguistics is a relationship between two objects indicating that they are (possibly on a less than physical level) connected in some way that cannot be changed. Some languages, such as Dholuo, mark this… …

    Wikipedia