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right of entry
noun
Where a grantor has created a fee simple subject to condition subsequent, and the condition of the grant has come to pass, the right of the grantor to physically reclaim ownership of the land.
Exact(58)
But no government recognizes a universal right of entry.
But the bailiff insisted he had a right of entry.
Ministers have previously rejected the idea of a statutory right of entry for social workers.
Those without cars, for example, will find their right of entry curtailed.
"British passport-holders have a right of entry to the UK.
Here, you can "eat, drink, shop", unless – of course – you are refused right of entry.
It is already abolishing an automatic right of entry for applicants from its network of affiliated secondary schools.
On Sunday night the committee appeared at the staff offices and demanded the right of entry, control and veto.
It does not allow us to remove you to another third-party country where you don't have a legal right of entry".
Similar(2)
Xenophon is holding out for changes including ensuring the ABCC bill does not harm occupational health and safety by watering down right-of-entry rights and that the government consider national laws to protect subcontractors' pay.
In its interim report commissioner Dyson Heydon concluded that, in early 2013, when Kitching was HSU No 1 branch general manager, she sat the right-of-entry tests "on behalf of one or more of" seven officials, including secretary Diana Asmar.
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