This form is a Release and Cancellation of Trust Agreement / Trust Indenture. All liens and encumberances created thereby are certified to be satisfied and released. Adapt to fit your circumstances.
This form is a Release and Cancellation of Trust Agreement / Trust Indenture. All liens and encumberances created thereby are certified to be satisfied and released. Adapt to fit your circumstances.
On the completion of his indenture, he continued to attend night school. The apprenticeship indentures were signed by the guild master and the apprentice's guardian.
In real estate, an indenture is a deed in which two parties agree to continuing obligations. For example, one party may agree to maintain a property and the other may agree to make payments on it.
: a written agreement : contract. 2. : a contract by which one person is made to work for another for a stated period. often used in plural. indenture.
Bound by or occurring under a written contract or formal agreement, especially to work for another: The five indentured electrical apprentices of the second-year class were sworn into the union on Thursday. Born in Belfast in 1949, he studied art while serving an indentured apprenticeship at a shipyard.
They bound themselves to work as indentured labourers for a set number of years on the plantations. This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. Between 1834 and 1921, around half a million indentured labourers were present on the island.
In general, nonviolent offenders are eligible for parole after serving 25 percent of their sentences; violent offenders must serve at least 50 percent.
The life of an indentured servant was difficult and filled with heavy physical labor. In the Chesapeake Colonies, this was usually field work. It has been estimated that an indentured servant working four acres of corn and tending 1,000 tobacco plants would bend over at least 50,000 times during servitude.
Mandatory Minimum Sentences In Maryland This means that if you were charged with a crime that requires a mandatory minimum sentence, the judge cannot give you a lesser sentence if you are convicted, regardless of extenuating circumstances, regardless of whether the punishment truly fits the crime.
For much of the seventeenth century, those servants were white English men and women—with a smattering of Africans, Indians, and Irish—under indenture with the promise of freedom.
The judge will receive recommendations from the prosecution and the defense but will ultimately make the decision of what sentence to give to the individual based on the information and recommendations that they have heard. The penalties for a felony offense are more serious than in misdemeanor cases.