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  2. uk.practicallaw.thomsonreuters.com › 5/382/5591Chattel | Practical Law

    A thing that a person can possess in physical form; a tangible, moveable asset (for example, a piece of jewellery, a painting or a car and, in some contexts, goods, equipment or machinery). Chattels are sometimes called "choses in possession", to distinguish them from choses in action.

  3. Nov 10, 2017 · Any personal goods other than “money, securities for money or property used solely or mainly for business purposes” falls into the definition of chattels. When a person dies, an accurate valuation of all of the assets to which they were entitled at the date of their death must be obtained which includes their chattels.

    • Definition of Chattel
    • What Is Chattel
    • Chattel Mortgage
    • Chattel Slavery
    • Trespass to Chattels
    • Chattel Example in U.S. Slavery
    • Related Legal Terms and Issues

    Noun 1. Items of personal property that are moveable 2. Physical property other than land, buildings, or things annexed or attached to the land 3. A slave Origin 1175-1225 Middle English chatel(from the word “cattle”)

    Chattel refers to any physical property that can be moved, as the property is neither a parcel of land, nor an item that is attached to a parcel of land, such as a home, or a tree that grows in the yard. Chattel is anything that a person might take with him if he needs to move to another location, like toiletries, appliances, or furniture (“persona...

    Chattel mortgages are loans that are used to buy cars and other items, such as commercial equipment. A chattel mortgage consists of the chattel (the car) and the mortgage (the loan that must be paid back). When the car is purchased, it becomes the property of either the person or company purchasing it. When a chattel mortgage is taken out for a car...

    Chattel slavery is the kind of slavery that most people think of when they try to imagine slavery. Chattel slavery involves the buying and selling of people as if they were pieces of property. Examples of chattel slaves are those who were inherited when their owners died and “willed” them to the next generation. Also considered chattel slaves are t...

    Trespass to chattels is a type of tort. A tort is a claim that may be made in a civil lawsuit. The accepted definition of “trespass to chattels” the intentional interference with another person’s lawful ownership of a chattel, or piece of property. Types of interference that can be argued in a trespass to chattels case can include: 1. Taking the pr...

    Perhaps the most famous Supreme Court case involving chattel slavery was the case involving Dred Scott, a slave from Missouri who was taken by his owner, Dr. John Emerson, to Illinois before the Civil War. Illinois was a free state, where slavery was outlawed. Still, when Emerson, a surgeon in the U.S. Army, was transferred to Fort Snelling in the ...

    Lien – The right to keep possessionof property that belongs to someone else until the debt owed is paid in full.
    Tort – An infringement on someone’s rights that leads to civil litigation.
  4. Personal chattels are defined by s55(1)(x) of the Administration of Estates 1925 as amended by the Inheritance and Trustees’ Powers Act 2014. This definition broadly covers all ‘tangible moveable property’ other than property used solely or mainly for business purposes or held as an investment.

  5. Chattels, simply put, are the valuables that are found in a deceased’s estate. In other words, their everyday belongings and possessions. Think of them as those things that you can pick up or move such as furniture, computers, jewellery, clothes, vehicles, cameras, a wine or art collection, and even pets, etc.

  6. Overall, "goods and chattels" is a legal term that encompasses the movable and tangible possessions that a person owns, excluding real estate. Understanding this concept can be helpful when navigating various legal situations, such as contracts, taxes, or asset distribution.

  7. It is important to establish what on land constitutes a fixture and a chattel. Fixtures are goods which belong as part of the land. Chattels are the personal effects of their owner.

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